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===[[User:Lars Hellan|Lars Hellan]] === | ===[[User:Lars Hellan|Lars Hellan]] === |
Revision as of 15:58, 4 August 2014
The TypeCraft Advisory Board are linguists who have agreed to give TypeCraft annotators help concerning their annotations and the on-line representation of their data. Every language family or group of languages represented in TC has its own Advisor; at present we have six advisors; we are still looking for an advisor for the Sami languages. In addition a technical and an administrative advisor will join the team of experts.
Contents
Biographies
[[]]
This page is currently under development.Thank you for your patience. |
Lars Hellan
With some background in philology and philosophy, he was brought up as an early-generation generative grammarian, with Norwegian as main field. Being theoretically first oriented towards Government-Binding theory and Montague Grammar, he later - late 90ies - moved more towards constraint-based frameworks such as HPSG, and got interested in computational grammar implementation. Since early 90ies he has also been interested in typologically oriented research.
(More details can be seen on Hellan_CV09+public .)
Mary Esther Kropp Dakubu
Mary Esther Kropp Dakubu has been working on languages of West Africa, particularly languages spoken in Ghana, since about 1962, and has been associated with the University of Ghana since 1964. She received her PhD in West African Languages from the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, after a BA (English and Philosophy) from Queeen's University, Kingston ON Canada and an MA in Linguistics from the University of Pennsylvania. Since 2012 she has been editor-in-chief of the Ghana Journal of Linguistics, and since 2013 Chief Coordinator of the University of Ghana Readers Project. For her (relatively) recent publications follow this link to her user page
Abdulaziz Y. Lodhi
Abdulaziz Y. Lodhi (1945, Zanzibar), was educated in Zanzibar, Daressalaam, Stockholm, Gothenburg.
Since 1970 he has been working with Swahili and East African Bantu languages, has conducted fieldowork in East Africa and India and as founder of Swahili and Bantuistics in the Nordic countries, he has published extensively on various branches of Swahilistics at the Universities of Uppsala and Gothenburg since 1973. His PhD from Gothenburg is on language contacts and Oriental loans in Eastern Africa. Since 2003 he has been working on Swahili lexicography projects in Nairobi and Daressalaam.
His other research interests are history and cultural anthropology of the Swahili Coast and East African Diaspora in the Indian Ocean.
For details please visit please visit my homepage
Marc van Oostendorp
Marc van Oostendorp is not only a phonologist who works for the Meertens Institute in Amsterdam and a professor at the University of Leiden, but also a 'internet pioneer'. He has built for example the project Laurens Janszoon Coster, a comprehensive on-line collection of Dutch literary masterpieces, and is currently working on Meldpunt Taal, a website where laymen can share their observations on language variation and change with researchers. He has also studied Esperanto.
In phonology, Marc works mostly on phonological microvariation, that is, the study of those phonological features that determine the differences between dialects or social classes. Furthermore, he is the editor-in-chief of the Companion to Phonology, to appear in 2011 with Blackwell.
Gautam Sengupta
Gautam Sengupta teaches linguistics and cognitive science at the University of Hyderabad, India, where he is currently an associate coordinator of the Center for Neural and Cogntive Sciences. He studied linguistics and philosophy at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. His areas of interest include formal syntax and semantics, philosophy of language and experimental psycholinguistics.