About me

I am a psycholinguist who is fascinated by how learners acquire mechanisms to process finer elements of grammar, especially those which don't exist in one's native language, and how they can become impaired later in life.

Currently, I am a guest postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Multilingualism in Society across the Lifespan (MultiLing) at the University of Oslo, where I work as a member of the Machine Learning Aphasia project. With project leader Valantis Fyndanis and colleagues, we examine predictors of morphosyntactic production (e.g. inflectional morphology) in individuals with post-stroke agrammatic aphasia across different languages.

I obtained my Doctor of Philosophy degree at the University of Edinburgh (2015-2020). My PhD work examined the source of inflectional errors in Mandarin speakers of English and how they process morphosyntactic violations across comprehension modalities. My research interests also include the role of phonological features in grammatical processing during language production and comprehension.

Full CV here

CV

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