University of California, Santa Barbara
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Matthew Gordon, Professor
1999, University of California, Los Angeles
Phonetics; phonology; typology
South Hall 3514, (805) 893-5954

My interest in linguistics began as an interest in studying languages. I remember in high school learning Finnish on my own and being fascinated by its linguistic structures, which were so different from those found in any of the languages I had studied in school. My experience with Finnish opened me up to the great diversity of languages and the enormous potential in studying linguistics. The focus of my research is on phonetics, the study of speech sounds, and phonology, the study of the organization of sound in linguistic systems. I enjoy examining the acoustic properties of speech and how these properties are perceived by the auditory system. I am interested in exploring the idea that articulatory and auditory factors play an important role in shaping phonological systems. Much of my work involves the study of prosodic features of language, such as stress and intonation. I feel it is important to base linguistic generalizations on as broad a sample of languages as possible, including those which are not well documented from a linguistic standpoint. For this reason, much of my investigation of phonetics and phonology centers around languages which are relatively underdocumented, including Balto-Finnic languages like Estonian, and American Indian languages like Chickasaw. One of my most rewarding experiences as a linguist is working firsthand on a language and discovering new sounds and sound patterns.

RECENT PUBLICATIONS

An autosegmental/metrical model of Chickasaw intonation, 2005, in Prosodic Typology: The Phonology of Intonation and Phrasing, edited by Sun-Ah Jun, Oxford University Press, pp. 301-330.

A perceptually-driven account of onset-sensitive stress, 2005, Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 23, 595-653.

A phonetic and phonological study of word-level stress in Chickasaw, 2004, International Journal of American Linguistics 70, 1-32.

A cross-linguistic acoustic study of fricatives [co-authored with Paul Barthmaier and Kathy Sands], 2002, Journal of the International Phonetic Association 32, 141-174.

A phonetically-driven account of syllable weight, 2002, Language 78, 51-80.

(Several articles in PDF format are downloadable from my publications website.)

CURRENT PROJECTS

  • the phonetics and phonology of syllable weight
  • accent and intonation in Chickasaw
  • phonetic and phonology of Kabardian stress in Émerillon

COURSES TAUGHT

  • Linguistics 20: Language and Linguistics
  • Linguistics 106/206: Introduction to Phonetics
  • Linguistics 111/211: Introduction to Phonology
  • Linguistics 115/215: Introduction to Historical-Comparative Linguistics
  • Linguistics 213: Experimental Phonetics
  • Linguistics 220: Prosody
  • Linguistics 221A: Field Methods
  • Linguistics 222: Typology and Universals
  • Linguistics 235: Advanced Phonology