Professor Emerita My areas of interest include pragmatics and semantics, discourse analysis, cognitive and functional linguistics, discourse reference and anaphora, discourse connectives/markers, and pragmatic variation in Spanish and English. My research has focused on the pragmatic and cognitive motivations influencing native Spanish speakers' and L2 Spanish learners' use of referring expressions (NPs, pronouns, null subjects), the influence of cognitive and interactional frames on spoken discourse, and the use of discourse connectives and markers in Spanish and English. I was Special Issues Editor of the Journal of Pragmatics from 2003-2008 and continue to serve on the editorial board of the journal. Education Education: Ph.D., Hispanic Linguistics, University of Pittsburgh M.A., Spanish, Middlebury College, The Spanish School, Madrid B.S., Speech and Language Pathology, Northwestern University Hamilton College Academic Year in Spain Research Areas of Interest: Pragmatics and Discourse Analysis Semantics Specific Research Areas: Pragmatics, Semantics, Discourse analysis, Cognitive and functional linguistics, Hispanic linguistics Selected Publications Selected Publications: Books: