Prospective PhD applicants: please read this. Prospective
visitors and interns: please read here about available
channels for getting involved in our research.
I am Professor in the Department of
Brain and Cognitive Sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
where I direct MIT's Computational
Psycholinguistics Laboratory. Before coming to MIT, I was faculty
in the Department of Linguistics at
UC San Diego.
My research focuses on theoretical and applied questions in the
processing and acquisition of natural language. Linguistic
communication involves the resolution of uncertainty over a
potentially unbounded set of possible signals and meanings. How can a
fixed set of knowledge and resources be deployed to manage this
uncertainty? And how is this knowledge acquired? To address these
questions I combine computational modeling, psycholinguistic
experimentation, and analysis of large naturalistic language datasets.
This work furthers our understanding of the cognitive underpinning of
language processing and acquisition, and helps us design models and
algorithms that will allow machines to process human language.
Here you can find my CV, and a brief
bio suitable for adaptation for conference programs.
Last modified: Mon 24 Feb 17:02:15 UTC 2025 by Roger Levy. Photo credit © 2016 Gabriel Aldaz.