The focus of the group was typical and atypical speech and language development in children, and atypical speech and language in adults.
Conversation analysis is an interdisciplinary research tradition that studies language and social interaction from various perspectives, e.g., sociological, anthropological, linguistic, and pedagogical.
The ecological significance of experimental methods in linguistics.
This research group is focused on the history of the book, textual criticism as well as reception studies and theory.
The research group focuses on cognitive aspects of learning and processing first, second and third languages in typical and atypical populations.
The Research Group in Language Change brings together people from different subfields of linguistics who do diachronic research.
Interdisciplinary research can provide new insights into language shift and contribute to the documentation and revitalization of threatened languages.
Phonology is the study of sound systems in languages. This research groups gathers those who do research on the properties of sound systems.
Bringing together researchers investigating how speakers go beyond linguistically encoded meaning in communication, and how children develop this ability.
We investigate grammatical and structural aspects of multilingual acquisition and use.
Super Linguistics is an emerging sub-field of linguistics that applies formal linguistic methodology to objects of study beyond language, such as gestures, music, dance, and non-verbal pictorial representations.
The research group studies poetry in a wide range of perspectives. Our focus is broad and includes epic, lyric and dramatic poetries.
Research on the diachronic development, variation, and change of structural patterns in Scandinavian dialects.