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2005 LSA Institute Linguistic Society of America
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Alec Marantz received a B.A. in Psycholinguistics from Oberlin College in 1978 and his Ph.D. from MIT in Linguistics in 1981. After three years as a Junior Fellow at Harvard, Professor Marantz joined the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In 1990, Marantz moved back to the Department of Linguistics and Philosophy at MIT, where he is currently Kenan Sahin Distinguished Professor of Linguistics and Department Head. In Linguistics, Marantz has done research in and published about syntax, morphology, phonology, and psycho- and neurolinguistics. His current work centers on the theory of “Distributed Morphology,” developed with Morris Halle, Rolf Noyer, Eulàlia Bonet, and others in the early 1990's. He has more recently begun collaborative research on the neurolinguistics of speech perception, lexical access, and morphological decomposition using MEG technology at the KIT/MIT MEG Joint Research Laboratory, for which he serves as Research Director.

Introduction to Neurolinguistics | LSA.307
MW 8:15-9:55
Six Week Course