Morphology Circle at Penn State
Our research focuses on issues relate to ‘words’ and the mental lexicon and the syntax-morphology interface. We adopt a decompositional approach to the formation of these structural units. Along these lines, we understand ‘morphology’ to be distributed across differ modules of grammar rather than housed in any particular domain. From a more experimental perspective, we investigate issues related to the storage and computation of lexical items in an attempt to better understand the general properties of the mental lexicon. Although we collectively work on issues related to morphology and its interfaces, we individually have diverse interests in comparative, contact, diachronic, and experimental approaches to morphology.
I am profoundly interested in the structure of language, specifically morphology and syntax, especially as this concerns the structure of ‘words’. Although they often appear smaller on the surface than other units of language (such as sentences and phrases), words contain a fair amount of complexity and rich information that warrant serious study. My research is guided by some of these ‘big questions’:
Empirically, I work on Germanic languages past and present, with a focus on heritage and contact varieties of German and Norwegian and Pennsylvania Dutch.
Heritage languages and syntactic theory. (edited with Roberta D’Alessandro & Silvia Terenghi). in press. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
The linguistic diversity of German: Sociolinguistic and structural variation in Europe and the diaspora. (with Joshua Bousquette, Josh Brown, & Joseph Salmons). under contract. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
An introduction to Language Attrition: linguistic, social, and cognitive perspectives. (with David Natvig & Nora Vosburg). under contract. London: Routledge.
Passives and middles in Mainland Scandinavian: Microvariation through exponency.[Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs.] (with Antonio Fábregas). Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Unbounded dependency constructions: Theoretical and experimental perspectives. [Oxford Surveys in Syntax and Morphology]. (with Rui Chaves). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
The Cambridge Handbook of Germanic Linguistics. (edited with B. Richard Page). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
The structural design of language. (with Thomas S. Stroik). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
The importance of features and exponents: Dissolving Feature Reassembly. (with Terje Lohndal). Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism, 14(1): 1-36. https://benjamins.com/catalog/lab.23023.loh
Filler-gap dependencies in bi- and multilingual grammars: Findings, challenges, and unknowns. (with Silvia Perpiñan). Second Language Research, 40(1): 3-17. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/02676583231214070
When covert modality sneaks into your grammar: wh-infinitives in American Norwegian. (with Åshild Søfteland). Second Language Research, 171-194. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/02676583221103741
Modeling multilingual grammars: Constraints and predictions. Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism, 14(1): 105-115. https://benjamins.com/catalog/lab.23074.loh
Stability in the integrated bilingual grammar: Tense exponency in North American Norwegian (with David Natvig & Alexander Lykke). Nordic Journal of Linguistics, First View. https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/nordic-journal-of-linguistics/article/stability-in-the-integrated-bilingual-grammar-tense-exponency-in-north-american-norwegian/09212D6C076CD7610E4DA6570ADAB09C
Islands, expressiveness, and the theory/formalism confusion. (with Rui P. Chaves). Theoretical Linguistics, 48(3-4): 219-231. https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/tl-2022-2041/html
Why is inflectional morphology difficult to borrow? – Distributing and lexicalizing plural allomorphy in Pennsylvania Dutch. (with Rose Fisher, David Natvig, Erin Pretorius, & Katharina Schuhmann). Languages 7, 86. https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/7/2/86
Mismatches at the syntax-semantics interface: The case of non-finite complementation in American-Norwegian. (with Åshild Søfteland). 45(3): 310-347 . Nordic Journal of Linguistics. https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/nordic-journal-of-linguistics/article/mismatches-at-the-syntaxsemantics-interface-the-case-of-nonfinite-complementation-in-american-norwegian/4B85B936AA6D21A9741B594B3736F7A8
The tale of two lexicons: Decomposing complexity across a distributed lexicon. (with Terje Lohndal). Heritage Language Journal 18(2): 1-29. https://brill.com/view/journals/hlj/18/2/article-p1_4.xml
Overextension in Gottscheerisch (negative) imperatives: Proclisis at the edge of the first phase. (with Andrew D. Hoffman). The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics 24(2): 185-219.
Addressing challenges in formal research on moribund heritage languages: A path forward. (with Roberta D’Alessandro & David A. Natvig). Frontiers in Psychology, 12:700126. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.700126/full
How wide the divide? – Theorizing ‘constructions’ in generative and usage-based frameworks. (with Antonio Fábregas & Matthew Carlson). Frontiers in Psychology, 12:601303. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.601303/full
Redefining language death: Evidence from moribund grammars. (with Joshua Bousquette). Language Learning 70(S1): 185-228
Language attrition and the Feature Reassembly Hypothesis. (with Silvia Perez-Cortes & Liliana Sánchez). In The Oxford Handbook of Language Attrition (ed. M. Schmid & B. Köpke), Oxford: Oxford University Press: 18-24.
Derivational complexity vs. transfer effects: Long-distance-wh-movement in heritage and L2 grammars. (with Holger Hopp & Nora Vosburg). Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism 9(3): 341-375.
Co-activation in bilingual grammars: A computational account of code mixing. (with Matt Goldrick & Lara Schwarz). Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 19(5): 857-876.
What’s so incomplete about incomplete acquisition? A prolegomenon to modeling heritage language grammars. (with Liliana Sánchez). Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism 3(4): 478-508.