tgb

Image
tgb@arizona.edu
Office
Communication 304B
Bever, Thomas
Professor

Home Department: Linguistics

Regents Professor

SLAT Areas of Specialization: Cognitive Dimensions of L2 Learning, Linguistic Dimensions of L2 Learning

Dr. Bever works with undergraduates and graduate students in Linguistics, Second Language Acquisition and Teaching, Psychology, Neuroscience and Education.

His research and teaching includes the current revival of “biolinguistics”, the idea that language is a biological object to be studied through the lens of evolution, with experimental and observational tools used in biology. This leads to studies of the causes of language universals aimed at delineating just those universals that are unique to language as opposed to being properties of general cognition, maturation, perception or motor behaviors. This in turn motivates studies of language-like universal processes outside of language, such as in music, spatial cognition, visual perception, animal cognition, child development, bilingual organization and second language learning, motion perception, conspecific recognition. A current theme of Dr. Bever's laboratory is the study of the neurological organization for language and cognition as a function of individual and familial left-handedness: this may give people a small window into the epigenetic dynamics involved in the emergence of brain organization for higher functions in the child.

Research Interests: Cognitive science, biolinguistics, psycholinguistics and sentence processing. Specific current topics include: Genetic variation in Language knowledge, Behavior and Neurological Organization; Second Language learning; Reading; Language and consciousness; Cognition and Aesthetics.

Area of Specialization
Cognitive dimensions of L2 learning
Linguistic dimensions of L2 learning