This month's episode is with Dr. Kate Lindsey. Kate is a professor of linguistics and co-director of the Structures of Under-Researched Languages lab at Boston University. Her research has both theoretical and documentary applications. Her theoretical work focuses on the analysis of underspecification and variation in phonological systems supported primarily by field data. Her dissertation utilized original data from eleven months of fieldwork with Ende speakers of Limol village, Papua New Guinea to explore the interaction of so-called ghost elements pervasive in Ende phonology. Current research projects include extended fieldwork in the South Fly area of Papua New Guinea to support the first reference grammar of Ende, a typological study of the Pahoturi River language family, and theoretical analyses of vowel harmony and phonological reduplication.
Things mentioned in this episode 
Hopi language
Chuvash language 
Nen language 
Pahoturi language family 
Idi language 
Ende language 
Ende Tän e Indrang (Light into Ende Tribe)
Kate's email: klindsey@bu.edu
Where There Is No Doctor: A Village Health Care Handbook

Field Notes

Martha Tsutsui Billins

Ep. 46: Kate Lindsey on Idi and Ende Language Documentation in Papua New Guinea

OCT 31, 202353 MIN
Field Notes

Ep. 46: Kate Lindsey on Idi and Ende Language Documentation in Papua New Guinea

OCT 31, 202353 MIN

Description

This month's episode is with Dr. Kate Lindsey. Kate is a professor of linguistics and co-director of the Structures of Under-Researched Languages lab at Boston University. Her research has both theoretical and documentary applications. Her theoretical work focuses on the analysis of underspecification and variation in phonological systems supported primarily by field data. Her dissertation utilized original data from eleven months of fieldwork with Ende speakers of Limol village, Papua New Guinea to explore the interaction of so-called ghost elements pervasive in Ende phonology. Current research projects include extended fieldwork in the South Fly area of Papua New Guinea to support the first reference grammar of Ende, a typological study of the Pahoturi River language family, and theoretical analyses of vowel harmony and phonological reduplication.

Things mentioned in this episode