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	<title>The Laursonian Institute &#187; compliments</title>
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	<description>An exercise in thoroughness</description>
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		<title>Good News for People Who Love Good News</title>
		<link>http://www.laurieandlewis.com/laurie/?p=827</link>
		<comments>http://www.laurieandlewis.com/laurie/?p=827#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Feb 2010 23:19:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Laurie</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[school]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[advisor]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[compliments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lab]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[linguists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[phonetics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[project]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[QP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[recording]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stimuli]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Namely, me.
It&#8217;s been a rather busy quarter so far, but we&#8217;ve just now reached the midway point.  I&#8217;ve had some kind of massively successful day.  These are my favorite sort &#8211; the kind where you wake up thinking to yourself that it&#8217;s going to be a rough day, and then you just nail everything as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Namely, me.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s been a rather busy quarter so far, but we&#8217;ve just now reached the midway point.  I&#8217;ve had some kind of massively successful day.  These are my favorite sort &#8211; the kind where you wake up thinking to yourself that it&#8217;s going to be a rough day, and then you just nail everything as the day goes.  Perfect performance in all realms.  I feel like I&#8217;m being an accommodating, thorough individual and life is repaying me by letting me make a good impression on people and do a decent job at the things I care about.</p>
<p>I recorded stimuli for a creolization project this morning.  It was a little like an <a title="IPA" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Phonetic_Alphabet">IPA</a> pop quiz, and I was doing it as a favor for a buddy of mine and a professor whose class I&#8217;m taking next quarter.  Wanted to do a good job, and it seems as though it went just fine.  Recorded each set 10 times, and wasn&#8217;t asked to redo anything.  Only little mishap was that my head is producing some ridiculous clicking noise, which sometimes happens to me.  I think it might be when I&#8217;m getting sick or something, my nasal cavity increases in pressure when I&#8217;ve closed my velum and it makes my ears pop.  I had noticed this a while ago and thought it was just something I could only hear in my own skull, but apparently it&#8217;s loud enough to get picked up on the microphone and disturb my recording a little.  I think they can edit it out, but it&#8217;s a little embarrassing to have a head which pops and cracks of its own volition!</p>
<p>After that I headed to the lab to meet with my advisor for the first time in two weeks.  We had a really good meeting, very relaxed and pleasant, and on top of that, also productive.  He seemed impressed with the work I had been doing while he was out of town, and I&#8217;ve gotten the go-ahead on the design I came up with in his absence.  Furthermore, he&#8217;s been talking about me to more famous psycholinguist types, and had a discussion about phonemic adaptation with <a title="Greg Hickok" href="http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&amp;q=g+hickok&amp;btnG=Search&amp;as_sdt=2000&amp;as_ylo=&amp;as_vis=0">Greg Hickok</a>!  Apparently Hickok has been working on a phonological adaptation experiment as well, but with whole phonemes instead of features.  I&#8217;m not sure what the status of his project is now since researchers are generally pretty close-lipped about work before it gets published, but it sounds like he did find some effects which is incredibly encouraging for our study!  I think it also made my advisor happy to see that famousy psycholinguist types are also doing work in our area and, to quote him, &#8220;the field is still wide open&#8221;.   Anyway, we tooled around with our experiment design and landed on a scheme we like, so I&#8217;m at the point where I&#8217;m ready to record some stimulus and start putting things together to prepare for our first pilot runs in the MRI.   Whoohoo!</p>
<p>In a related note, I also ran in to my advisor&#8217;s wife (who also works at the center) and she had some very nice things to say about me.  I&#8217;ve never really met her before, but she stopped in an office I was in to see who I was and tell me that she edited the letter of rec that my advisor wrote for me and was very impressed with me.  She was being a little jokey about it, but it&#8217;s nice to hear someone say, even jocularly, that I&#8217;m an impressive person and that she was hoping they&#8217;d be able to keep me around in the lab because what I do is very cool.  If that&#8217;s the content of my advisor&#8217;s letter of rec, I feel like I&#8217;m in rather good hands.   It&#8217;s the back-door equivalent of having someone stop you and tell you that your advisor has been talking about how great you are.  Many yays for that!</p>
<p>Speaking of people speaking well of me, I also got into a little snafu over my assignments next quarter.  Apparently I had been assigned to be a reader for the historical linguistics class that Lewis&#8217; advisor is teaching, and that he had specifically requested me.  Unfortunately, my advisor was also hoping to give me a graduate student research position in the lab (ie, no TAing-type work, only research work you actually get paid for, as opposed to all the research I&#8217;m doing anyway but not getting paid for).  I hadn&#8217;t meant for this to be a surprise for the department, since I presumed it was being communicated to people that this spring was my &#8216;free&#8217; quarter, which the fellowship I won last year allowed me to have.  Turns out, there is no &#8216;free&#8217; quarter since they can&#8217;t afford my fees if I don&#8217;t work and they had given my a job without telling me.  Needless to say, my department chair wasn&#8217;t really happy to hear I thought I was going to be a researcher not a reader, and it was a bit of a debacle.  At any rate, he called my advisor while we were meeting and last I heard was he had backed down from saying I needed to do this readership and told me advisor &#8216;we should do whatever is best for Laurie&#8217;.  That&#8217;s a very good place to be, even if it&#8217;s causing the department some strife.  I&#8217;m not sure what the final outcome is going to be, but it sounds like one way or the other, I&#8217;ll get that research position, even if I have to do both jobs.  Which would, on the bright side, be a decent amount of money!</p>
<p>Last, and I suppose least, I think we also finally picked a project for our phonetics paper, and it&#8217;s something I&#8217;m actually surprisingly interested in.  It&#8217;s going to be a very short paper which is only an experimental design, and I&#8217;m coauthoring it with two of my best friends in my cohort.  Yes, that does compute to something like 1.5 pages each.  I&#8217;m really looking forward to that, especially given the frustrating next week I&#8217;m potentially having in my psychology class.  I got my presentation moved up a week by surprise, and I&#8217;ve got a rough draft of that paper due the same day.  I&#8217;ll get it done.  I&#8217;m feeling so on top of the world right now.</p>
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