Prof. Douglas Biber
Curriculum Vite
Douglas Biber
is currently Regents’ Professor in the Applied Linguistics Program
(English Department) at Northern Arizona University. He received his
Ph.D. in Linguistics from the University of Southern California in 1984,
and was awarded an Honorary Ph.D. from the University of Uppsala in
2000. Since 1990, he has spent time as a visiting professor at numerous
universities around the world, including the Universities of
Copenhagen, Hamburg, Zurich, Helsinki, Uppsala, Bergen, Stockholm,
Temple University Japan, Universidad Católica de Valparaíso (Chile),
Michigan State University (LSA Summer Institute), and the Norwegian
Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Biber has published 11 authored and co-authored books, with Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, Longman, and John Benjamins. In addition, he has published 5 edited books and monographs, and over 150 journal articles and book chapters. These studies have addressed a wide range of issues in corpus linguistics, English grammar, and register variation (in English and cross-linguistic; synchronic and diachronic). Research articles have appeared in numerous research journals, including Corpora, Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory, Applied Linguistics, Journal of Historical Pragmatics, Journal of English Linguistics, Discourse Studies, International Journal of Corpus Linguistics, Text, Literary and Linguistic Computing, Computational Linguistics, Language Variation and Change, Discourse Processes, Linguistics, Language, and American Speech.
Biber has published 11 authored and co-authored books, with Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, Longman, and John Benjamins. In addition, he has published 5 edited books and monographs, and over 150 journal articles and book chapters. These studies have addressed a wide range of issues in corpus linguistics, English grammar, and register variation (in English and cross-linguistic; synchronic and diachronic). Research articles have appeared in numerous research journals, including Corpora, Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory, Applied Linguistics, Journal of Historical Pragmatics, Journal of English Linguistics, Discourse Studies, International Journal of Corpus Linguistics, Text, Literary and Linguistic Computing, Computational Linguistics, Language Variation and Change, Discourse Processes, Linguistics, Language, and American Speech.
Education
B.S. 1974 The Pennsylvania State University: Geophysics
M.A. 1977 The University of Texas at Arlington: Linguistics
M.A. 1982 University of Southern California: Linguistics
Ph.D. 1984 University of Southern California: Linguistics
Professional Experience
1990-present : Regents' Professor, Applied Linguistics Program, English Department, Northern Arizona University
(Regents' Professor since 2000)
1984-1990 : Assistant Professor, Department of Linguistics, University of Southern California
(joint appointment with Speech Science and Technology from 1984-1986)
1983-1984 : Programmer/Consultant, Academic Computing Services, University of Southern California
1981-1983 : Assistant Lecturer, Freshman Writing Program, U.S.C.
1978-1980 : Project Coordinator, Somali Literacy Project
Honorary Degrees, Awards and Fellowships
2000 : Honorary Ph.D. degree; Uppsala University, Sweden
2008 : Research fellowship; Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies, University of Freiburg, Germany
2009 : Ian Gordon Fellowship, Victoria University Wellington, New Zealand
2014 : John Trim Award; Language Testing Research Colloquium
B.S. 1974 The Pennsylvania State University: Geophysics
M.A. 1977 The University of Texas at Arlington: Linguistics
M.A. 1982 University of Southern California: Linguistics
Ph.D. 1984 University of Southern California: Linguistics
Professional Experience
1990-present : Regents' Professor, Applied Linguistics Program, English Department, Northern Arizona University
(Regents' Professor since 2000)
1984-1990 : Assistant Professor, Department of Linguistics, University of Southern California
(joint appointment with Speech Science and Technology from 1984-1986)
1983-1984 : Programmer/Consultant, Academic Computing Services, University of Southern California
1981-1983 : Assistant Lecturer, Freshman Writing Program, U.S.C.
1978-1980 : Project Coordinator, Somali Literacy Project
Honorary Degrees, Awards and Fellowships
2000 : Honorary Ph.D. degree; Uppsala University, Sweden
2008 : Research fellowship; Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies, University of Freiburg, Germany
2009 : Ian Gordon Fellowship, Victoria University Wellington, New Zealand
2014 : John Trim Award; Language Testing Research Colloquium
November
2012
|
Visiting
Professor, Langnet Program, University of Tampere, Finland
|
Nov-Dec
2010
|
Visiting
Professor, Linguistics Department, King Mongkut's University of Technology Thonburi
(KMUTT), Bangkok, Thailand
|
Summer
2003
|
Visiting
Professor, Linguistic Society of America, Michigan State University
|
April-May
2009
|
Ian Gordon
Fellow, Victoria
University Wellington, New Zealand
|
Nov-Dec
2008
|
Research
Fellow, FRIAS, (Freiburg
Institute for Advanced Studies) University of Freiburg, Germany
|
April
2008
|
Visiting
Professor, Graduate School, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
|
Spring
2004
|
Distinguished
Lecturer, School of Education, Temple University Japan, Tokyo and Osaka
|
Winter
2004
|
Visiting Professor,
Linguistics Department, Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, Chile
|
Fall
2003
|
Guest
Researcher, Research Centre on Multilingualism, University of Hamburg, Germany
|
FRIAS-Projekt
Developement of Statistical Models for the Description of Linguistic Variation.
I will be working on two general
research topics during my stay at the Institute. The first concerns the
patterns of grammatical/discourse complexity in English texts and
registers. This project has both empirical and theoretical components.
The empirical component is focused on documenting the differing ways in
which grammatical features are distributed and used in different
registers, providing corpus evidence to support the general claim that
different registers rely on dramatically different kinds of grammatical
complexity. The theoretical component is focused on developing a
framework for the measurement and description of grammatical/discourse
complexity which could be applied in studies of language development or
textual analysis.
The second general research topic
is focused on the corpus study of formulaic language, considering the
range of expressions and formulaic patterns that are commonly used in a
register. For example, the study will apply quantittative methods to
determine the extent to which a frequent lexical sequence is fixed or
variable, and the extent to which various lexical frames are fixed or
variable. Some of the underlying research questions of this project are:
to what extent is discourse in English formulaic? to what extent is
discourse from particular registers (e.g., conversation or academic
writing) formulaic? is discourse in all languages equally formulaic? if
not, what are the differences, and how can they be accounted for?