People

Meghan Sumner

I am an Associate Professor in the Department of Linguistics at Stanford University.  I conduct research examining the representations and mechanisms listeners use to understand spoken language in a socially-rich world, and the critical role social information inherently conveyed through speech has on these processes and representations.

William Clapp

Will is a second year PhD student interested primarily in phonetics, phonology, and psycholinguistics. His work focuses on the ways that rich acoustic information informs speech processing and phonetic/phonological representations. His current projects include investigations in episodic memory and perceptual learning.

Alexia Hernandez

Alexia is interested in psycholinguistics, phonetics, phonology, and sociophonetics. She hopes to work with a more diverse population in her psycholinguistic studies to learn more about human’s linguistic processing. 

Sarang Jeong

Sarang is a third-year graduate student, and is interested in phonological and phonetic variation, phonology-phonetics interactions, and sound change. Her research focuses on Korean, Russian, and American English.

Yin Lin Tan

Irene Yi