Mira Ariel Explained

Mira Ariel is a professor of linguistics at Tel Aviv University, specializing in pragmatics.[1] A pioneer of the study of information structure, she is best known for creating and developing Accessibility Theory.[2]

Education and career

After completing a BA in linguistics and English literature at Tel Aviv University in 1976, Ariel studied at the University of Pennsylvania, where she graduated with an MA in 1978. Ariel returned to Tel Aviv University in 1979 to pursue her PhD studies. She was advised by Tanya Reinhart and Ellen Prince and was awarded her PhD in 1986 with a dissertation entitled, Givenness marking. She subsequently spent a brief period as honorary research fellow in sociolinguistics at the University of London.[3] [4]

Ariel was hired as Lecturer at Tel Aviv University in 1988 and spent her whole career there, reaching the rank of full professor in 2006.[5]

Honors

From 2018 to 2019, she served as President of the Societas Linguistica Europaea.[6]

In 2021 she was elected as a member of the Academia Europaea.

Research

Ariel’s research deals with issues in pragmatics and at the semantics-pragmatics interface and is mainly concerned with linguistic manifestations of reference to entities in discourse.[1] Her body of work on Accessibility Theory makes the case that the language user’s choice of anaphora is governed by the notion of accessibility in memory. Ariel’s accessibility marking scale proceeds from low to high accessibility in the following order:[7]

  1. Full name + modifier
  2. Full name
  3. Long definite description
  4. Short definite description
  5. Last name
  6. First name
  7. Distal demonstrative + modifier
  8. Proximal demonstrative + modifier
  9. Distal demonstrative (+ NP)
  10. Proximal demonstrative (+ NP)
  11. Stressed pronoun + gesture
  12. Stressed pronoun
  13. Unstressed pronoun
  14. Cliticized pronoun
  15. Verbal pronoun inflections
  16. Zero

Ariel's Accessibility Theory has been influential in a wide variety of domains beyond pragmatics, including cognitive linguistics,[8] linguistic typology,[9] sociolinguistics, discourse analysis,[10] language acquisition,[11] poetics,[12] psycholinguistics,[13] and natural language processing.[14]

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mira Ariel – Tel Aviv University. 28 July 2022.
  2. Web site: Academia Europaea: Mira Ariel. 27 July 2022.
  3. Web site: Academia Europaea: Mira Ariel CV. 27 July 2022.
  4. Web site: Mira Ariel, Ph.D.. 28 July 2022.
  5. Web site: Academy of Europe: CV . 2022-12-31 . www.ae-info.org.
  6. Web site: About Societas Linguistica Europaea . 2022-12-31 . The Societas Linguistica Europaea . en-GB.
  7. Ariel, Mira. 2001. Accessibility theory: an overview. In Ted Sanders, Joost Schilperoord, & Wilbert Spooren (eds.), Text representation: linguistic and psychological aspects, 29–87. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
  8. Croft, William, & Alan Cruse. 2004. Cognitive linguistics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p51.
  9. Croft, William. Typology and universals. Second edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p179.
  10. Schiffrin, Deborah. 1996. Narrative as Self-Portrait: Sociolinguistic Constructions of Identity. Language in Society 25 (2), 167–203, p192.
  11. Sorace, Antonella. 2011. Pinning down the concept of "interface" in bilingualism. Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism 1 (1), 1–33, p14.
  12. Emmott, Catherine. 2003. Reading for pleasure: a cognitive poetic analysis of ‘twists in the tale’ and other plot reversals in narrative texts. In Joanna Gavins & Gerard Steen (eds.), Cognitive poetics in practice, 145–160. London: Routledge, p158.
  13. Warren, Tessa, & Edward Gibson. 2002. The influence of referential processing on sentence complexity. Cognition 85 (1), 79–112.
  14. Webster, Kellie, and Joel Nothman. 2016. Using mention accessibility to improve coreference resolution. Proceedings of the 54th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics 432–437, p432.