UCSC
Review Winter 1997
Faculty Profile: Jaye Padgett
Humans have an extraordinary ability for self-expression. So extraordinary,
in fact, that we speak between five and six thousand distinct languages.
Below the surface of this diversity of tongues lies a kind of subatomic
commonality, linking our languages. Just as we all look different
but share identical elements of DNA, languages that sound quite
different often share many of the same rules.
"The workings of language are very systematic and quite beautiful," says
Jaye Padgett, a theoretical linguist whose specialty is phonology.
Like a microbiologist who gains insight into organisms by examining
their cells, a phonologist sheds light on languages by studying
the patterns of sounds.
Padgett is considered one of the country's leading young phonologists
because he has pinned down and verified a number of these patterns.
Even though he speaks only English, Russian, and a smattering of
Spanish, he researches hundreds of different languages--focusing
on the relationships of sounds rather than the meaning of words.
One relationship Padgett is researching is called nasal place
assimilation--a rule that turns up in many languages, including
English, Spanish, Polish, Ponapean (a Micronesian language), Zoque
(an indigenous language of Mexico), and Swahili.
According to the rule, the nasal sound in words--the "m" in
camper, "n" in canter, and "n" in canker--is
always voiced in the same place in the mouth as the sound that
follows. In this case the "m" and "p" in camper
are articulated at the lips, the "n" and "t" in
canter are voiced at the tip of the tongue, and the "n" and "k" in
canker are both said using the back of the tongue.
Padgett observes that even though each language operates with
its own set of rules, many--like nasal place assimilation--are
held in common. "When you find there are patterns you have
to ask why they're there. To see patterns and come up with explanations
that reduce them to a simple, logical understanding is irresistible," he
says.
Theoretical linguistics is a relatively new field, emerging only
in the second half of this century. It takes place in a far more
abstract realm than the applied linguistics employed in such areas
as speech pathology, language instruction, and artificial intelligence
research.
UCSC's Linguistics Department, which Padgett joined in 1992, is
devoted solely to theoretical research and is widely recognized
as outstanding in this domain. The department's stature was formally
recognized in 1994 when it earned a top ranking--tenth--from the
National Research Council in its reputable ten-year survey of the
country's best doctoral programs.
For Padgett, research in such an uncharted field is clearly stimulating. "Half
the fun is discovering the mysteries and then figuring out why
they exist. When you find something common across languages, ultimately,
it sheds light on all people. It shows that the differences are
quite superficial and the similarities run deep."
Barbara McKenna
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