{"id":209976,"date":"2019-07-03T11:48:07","date_gmt":"2019-07-03T15:48:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/newscenter\/?p=209976"},"modified":"2019-10-24T15:33:05","modified_gmt":"2019-10-24T19:33:05","slug":"language-lovers-find-connections-with-stem-humanities","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/newscenter\/2019\/07\/03\/language-lovers-find-connections-with-stem-humanities\/","title":{"rendered":"Language Lovers Find Connections with STEM, Humanities"},"content":{"rendered":"
As a jazz and blues singer, Rebecca Stachowicz is used to performing in rooms with good acoustics. Recently, she\u2019s been broadening her repertoire, performing research as a graduate assistant in the old University radio station, studio space repurposed for the study of language and its connections with the humanities, science and technology.<\/p>\n
On a recent visit to the Experimental Linguistics Lab, Stachowicz sported an elastic cap fitted with electrodes. It\u2019s a tool in the research of Lauren Covey, an assistant professor who studies how the brain processes complex sentences in order to better understand the differences and similarities between native speakers of a language and adult second language learners.<\/p>\n
Since WMCS\u2019s move to new digs, students and faculty are making use of the sound paneling in the former radio studio and control rooms to record and analyze language. \u201cThe kind of data we are working on involves acoustic and electrical waveforms, and statistical visualizations,\u201d says Jonathan Howell, associate professor of Linguistics.<\/p>\n
The projects include a study on the language variety linguists term African-American English and work annotating speech to detect differences in rhythm, stress and intonation. It\u2019s a sampling of the linguistics research<\/a> taking place at 麻豆传媒在线, much of it supported by grants from the National Science Foundation.<\/p>\n