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Jennifer Hay

Professor of linguistics From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Jennifer Bohun Hay FRSNZ is a New Zealand linguist who specialises in sociolinguistics, laboratory phonology, and the history of New Zealand English. As of 2020 she is a full professor at the University of Canterbury.[1]

Quick facts FRSNZ, Alma mater ...
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Academic career

In 2000, Hay gained a PhD titled Causes and Consequences of Word Structure at Northwestern University in Illinois in the Linguistics department. She moved to the University of Canterbury, and was appointed a full professor in 2010.[1]

Hay's research has revealed that a New Zealand dialect took only a single generation to emerge.[2] She has explored how speech perception and production is influenced by past experiences and current context, including environmental factors: for example, New Zealanders hear vowels differently if they are in a room with toy kangaroos and koalas as opposed to toy kiwi.[2][3]

Hay is the director of the New Zealand Institute of Language, Brain and Behaviour, a multi-disciplinary research centre based at the University of Canterbury.[2][4] In 2015 she was awarded a James Cook Research Fellowship to research on how personal experience shapes the New Zealand accent and word use.[5]

In 2017, Hay was featured in the Royal Society Te Apārangi's 150 women in 150 words project, celebrating the contributions of women to knowledge in New Zealand.[2]

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Awards

Hay received a Rutherford Discovery Fellowship in 2011,[6] a James Cook Research Fellowship and a University of Canterbury Research Award in 2015,[7][3] and was made a Fellow of the Royal Society Te Apārangi in 2015.[8]

Selected articles

  • Jennifer Hay; Aaron Nolan; Katie Drager (1 January 2006). "From fush to feesh: Exemplar priming in speech perception". The Linguistic Review. 23 (3). doi:10.1515/TLR.2006.014. ISSN 0167-6318. Wikidata Q104451332.
  • Jennifer Hay; Katie Drager; Paul Warren (29 April 2009). "Careful Who You Talk to: An Effect of Experimenter Identity on the Production of the NEAR/SQUARE Merger in New Zealand English". Australian Journal of Linguistics. 29 (2): 269–285. doi:10.1080/07268600902823128. ISSN 0726-8602. Wikidata Q57707500.
  • Márton Sóskuthy; Jennifer Hay (5 June 2017). "Changing word usage predicts changing word durations in New Zealand English". Cognition. 166: 298–313. doi:10.1016/J.COGNITION.2017.05.032. ISSN 0010-0277. PMID 28595142. Wikidata Q50594835.
  • Jennifer Hay (2 March 2018). "Sociophonetics: The Role of Words, the Role of Context, and the Role of Words in Context". Topics in Cognitive Science. doi:10.1111/TOPS.12326. ISSN 1756-8765. PMID 29498479. Wikidata Q50421187.
  • Jennifer Hay; Abby Walker; Kauyumari Sanchez; Kirsty Thompson (4 February 2019). "Abstract social categories facilitate access to socially skewed words". PLOS One. 14 (2): e0210793. doi:10.1371/JOURNAL.PONE.0210793. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 6361498. PMID 30716075. Wikidata Q61800437.
  • Jennifer Hay; Katie Drager (September 2007). "Sociophonetics". Annual Review of Anthropology. 36 (1): 89–103. doi:10.1146/ANNUREV.ANTHRO.34.081804.120633. ISSN 0084-6570. Wikidata Q60333707.
  • Jennifer Hay; Katie Drager (January 2010). "Stuffed toys and speech perception". Linguistics. 48 (4). doi:10.1515/LING.2010.027. ISSN 0024-3949. Wikidata Q104451326.

Authored books

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References

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