- Ivan Sag
Ivan Sag (born
November 9 ,1949 inAlliance, Ohio ) is a professor oflinguistics and Director of the Symbolic Systems Program [ [http://symsys.stanford.edu/ssp_people?group=Administration Symbolic Systems Program ] ] atStanford University .With
Carl Pollard , he has written several books that introduce and develop the syntactic theory known ashead-driven phrase structure grammar (HPSG). He was also involved with work ongeneralized phrase structure grammar , HPSG's immediate intellectual predecessor. In addition, he has written numerous articles on problems of linguistic theory and analysis.His research interests include long-distance dependencies (known more popularly as Wh-Movement), the English auxiliary system, ellipsis, binding, various issues related to the syntax/semantics interface, and syntactic theory's relationship to language processing. His recent work has looked to integrate ideas from
construction grammar with ideas already present in HPSG.Sag got his PhD from
MIT in1976 , writing his dissertation (advised byNoam Chomsky ) on ellipsis. He received an MA from theUniversity of Pennsylvania , where he studied comparativeIndo-European languages ,Sanskrit , andsociolinguistics , and a BA from theUniversity of Rochester . He was expelled from Mercersburg Academy in 1965. [http://lingo.stanford.edu/sag/mburg-speech.pdf]References
External links
* [http://lingo.stanford.edu/sag Ivan Sag's personal webpage]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.