D. Terence Langendoen
Professor Emeritus, Department of Linguistics, University of Arizona, and
Program Officer for Linguistics and Cyberinfrastructure,
National Science Foundation

address: National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd, Room 995, Arlington VA 22230 USA
phone: +1 703 292-5088, fax: +1 703 292-9068 email: dlangend at nsf dot gov

 Vita

 Publications

 Courses

I received my Ph.D. degree in linguistics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1964. I taught at The Ohio State University from 1964 to 1969; at Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York from 1969 to 1988; and at the University of Arizona from 1988 to 2005, retiring in July of that year. Since May 2006, I have been working as a Program Officer for Linguistics in the Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences at the National Science Foundation, and since October 2006 have been on half-time detail to the Office of Cyberinfrastructure at NSF.

Abstract of talk Finite-state linguistic structure building, 11 May 2007, University of Maryland Mayfest. Slides of Finite-state linguistic structure building.

Slides of Steps toward global interoperability for language resources, 9 January 2008. Workshop on Global Interoperability for Language Resources, City University of Kong Kong.

Draft of paper An OWL-DL implementation of GOLD, first author Scott Farrar, to appear in Andreas Witt & Dieter Metzing (eds.), Linguistic modeling of information and markup languages: Contributions to language technology, Springer.

Check out Electric Fun Stuff, my son David's cool company.

Last updated 2008-01-01.