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Lewis Esposito Lewis's research examines the social forces that drive patterns of linguistic variation.
He is particularly interested in how style relates to community-level patterns of
variation and change, primarily, although not exclusively, at the level of sound.
He is also interested in the roles of gender and sexuality in variation, as well as
the connections among socio-indexical, pragmatic, and semantic meaning. He graduated
from Swarthmore College in 2016 with a BA in Linguistics & Languages, and he is currently
finishing up his PhD in Linguistics from Stanford University.
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Brandon Waldon My research examines how context, linguistic structure, and social cognition jointly
enable linguistic communication. I’m currently wrapping up the final year of my PhD
in linguistics at Stanford, where I wrote a dissertation on the interpretation of
epistemic modals (e.g., It’s probably raining outside; It might be raining outside).
Beyond modals, I’ve worked on a variety of topics in semantics and pragmatics, including
linguistic vagueness/imprecision, referring expression production, and conversational
implicature.
I’m also interested in using linguistic theory and methods to help lawyers, judges,
and the public navigate hard problems of legal textual analysis. Starting in April,
I’ll spend a year as a postdoc at Georgetown, with a focus on computational linguistics
and its applications to legal interpretation.
Following the postdoc, I’ll be coming to USC! I am so excited to start working with
students and faculty in the Linguistics Program and the Philosophy Department.
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