Joanna Morris
Associate Professor
Education:
Ph.D. - Psychology The University of Pennsylvania
Brief Biography:
I graduated summa cum laude from Dartmouth College with a major in Psychology and was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship which enabled me to pursue an M.Phil. in Theoretical Linguistics at Wolfson College, Oxford University. After Oxford, I received my Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of Pennsylvania. I am interested in the structure of lexical representations and in applying ERP and chronometric techniques to the investigation of cognitive phenomena.
Area(s) of Expertise:
psycholinguistics, cognitive science, cognitive neuroscience, the lexicon, electrophysiology
Teaching Philosophy:
I believe strongly that learning should be inquiry-based and student-driven. The overriding goal of my teaching is to try to change students from being consumers of knowledge into being producers of knowledge. I want them to understand that science is a tool with which to answer questions, rather than a set of facts that must be learned. It is a conversation among researchers and I want students see that they can take part in that conversation.
Selected Publications:
Morris, J. (2019) Morphological Development in Normal and Clinical Populations.. Perspectives of the ASHA Special Interest Groups.(4), 1250-1258.
Dávila, J. Morris, J. (2018) From Orthography to Semantics: a Study of Morphological Processing through Deep Learning Neural Networks.. IEEE
Morris, J. (2017) The Interaction Between Storage and Computation in Morphosyntactic Processing. Boston, MA: Springer US:
Morris, J. (2013) Tracking the consequences of morpho-orthographic decomposition using ERPs. Brain Research.(1529), 92-104.
Detailed CV