Roger Brown Award

 

The IASCL Roger Brown Award was established in honor of Roger W. Brown. Roger W. Brown was Professor of Social Psychology at Harvard University from 1962 to 1994. He is acknowledged as the father of modern-day research on child language and is widely recognized as the founder of developmental psycholinguistics and a pioneer in the study of how children acquire language. 

The highly prestigious Award was established in 2011. It is conferred every three years to outstanding researchers and leaders in the field of child language. As of 2024, the IASCL decided to confer up to two Roger Brown Awards per period of three years. 

Based on confidential nominations from the membership, Award recipients are selected based on careful consideration of the number and range of publications, citations, and contributions to the IASCL and the child language research community. Recipients are announced at the triannual IASCL Business Meeting.

Roger Brown Awards 2024

The 2024 Roger Brown Award Committee consisted of Laura Bosch (Spain), Patricia Brooks (United States), and Annick De Houwer (Belgium; Chair and IASCL President). After studying several nominations, the Committee decided to take advantage of the option to name two Roger Brown Award winners. Its decision was announced at the IASCL Business Meeting held on July 17, 2024, during the XVIth IASCL Congress in Prague, Czechia. 

 The IASCL Roger Brown Awards for 2024 have been conferred to (in alphabetical order) Dr. Fred H. Genesee, Professor Emeritus, McGill University, Canada, and to Dr. Elena V. M. Lieven, Professor Emerita of the University of Manchester, United Kingdom.

In conferring the Roger Brown Award, the IASCL is honoring Professors Genesee and Lieven for their career contributions to language development research. The child language research community is deeply grateful to these eminent scholars for their important work throughout the years. We congratulate them on receiving this prestigious Award.

You will find the laudatio for each 2024 Roger Brown Award winner below.

Laudatio for Dr. Fred Genesee

We honor Prof. Fred Genesee for his career contributions to advancing knowledge in the field of bilingual language development, and for extending knowledge in educational domains including language and literacy learning in immersion programs, dual language education, and second language learning. He also deserves to be honored for his significant contributions to linguistic research on international adoptees, a relatively neglected research domain, with a focus on language acquisition and language loss processes as a lens towards revealing neurobiological constraints and neural plasticity in these less typical contexts of language acquisition. Prof. Genesee was awarded the Canadian Psychology Association Gold Medal Award in 2014, and the Canadian Association of Second Language Teachers Lifetime Achievement Award in 2016. Prof. Genesee was an esteemed member of the TESOL (Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages) association, where he successively served as member of the Executive Board (1988-91), Vice-President (1993-94) and President (1994-95). He belongs to different professional organizations, among them the International Association for the Study of Child Language (IASCL) where he was a member of the Executive Committee from 2005 to 2011. His mentorship of and support to graduate students, post-doctoral fellows, and early career scholars from the Psychology Department at McGill University in Montreal has been extensive. His numerous publications reflect the evolution and changes in his research interests, beginning with an early focus on educational topics in bilingual contexts, to language development in young bilingual children, with a focus on production and morphosyntactic abilities, to topics that go beyond bilingual studies to address more specific areas of research, such as the impact of international adoption on language acquisition processes, or, more recently, the effects of early auditory deficits on children's communicative and language outcomes. This rich research trajectory reflects Prof. Genesee's scientific curiosity about language learning and acquisition topics from different but complementary perspectives that broaden our view on child language acquisition, our capacity for language learning, and the interplay with properties of human cognition.

Laudatio for Dr. Elena Lieven

We honor Prof. Elena Lieven for advancing a usage-based theory of language development; for her leadership as past President of the IASCL (2008-2011) and as Chair of its Board of Trustees, (2011-2014), and as past Editor of the Journal of Child Language (1996-2005); and for her skilled mentorship and support of graduate students, post-doctoral fellows, and early career scholars. In each of these capacities, Prof. Lieven has made indelible marks on the field. As a member of the faculty of the University of Manchester and a senior research scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany, Prof. Lieven led innovative experimental and observational studies of children’s language development. Her research has uncovered deep connections between emerging lexical and grammatical knowledge and the available input, while illuminating the role of cultural practices, social circumstances, linguistic features, and individual proclivities in shaping learning trajectories. Advancing open-science practices, Prof. Lieven and her research team contributed large, dense longitudinal corpora to the CHILDES database, providing free access and use of their data to interested students and researchers. Prof. Lieven was instrumental in launching the LuCiD International Centre for Language and Communicative Development, which aims to transform understanding of how children learn to communicate with language and deliver the evidence base necessary to design effective interventions in the early years. Since her retirement as director in 2020, LuCiD continues to promote cross-cultural and cross-linguistic studies of children’s language development with implications for theory and practice. In 2018, Prof. Lieven was elected Fellow of the British Academy, Fellow of the Cognitive Science Society, and Member of the prestigious Academia Europaea.

Roger Brown Award Recipients 2011-2021

2011
Brian Mac Whinney

2014
Dan Slobin

2017
Jean Berko Gleason

2021
Eve Clark

  • Prof. Eve V. Clark has been a longstanding leader in the areas of the acquisition of word meaning, including abstract and relational terms, over- and underextensions, new word coinages; usage-based approaches, including pragmatic principles, multi-modal and contingent features of everyday talk, co-speech gesture, communicative interaction and intent; input and repairs and reformulations; the relationship between language development and cognition, including emergent categories. She has had an enduring influence on observational and experimental methods and on the theoretical bases of development. Her work has had a profound impact via not only publications and teaching, but also her behind-the-scenes work as an editor (e.g., for Language, Monographs of the SRCD, Journal of Memory and Language, Oxford International Encyclopedia of Linguistics) and as a member of numerous research council panels, both at home and abroad (e.g., in the US: National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, National Endowment for the Humanities; research councils in Canada, The Netherlands, France). She has acted as a Professor, Visiting Professor, or Visiting Scholar in over 28 organizations across over 9 countries; she served as an officer of the IASCL (as President, 2011-2014), the Linguistic Society of America LSA, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science AAAS. The evidence for the esteem with which her tireless work is held is shown by her having been invited to act as a Keynote or Plenary speaker over 45 times from 1976 to the present.

    The child language research community is grateful to Eve Clark for her impressive body of work, which has been key in helping to shape many of the debates in the field, and we congratulate her on receiving this prestigious award.

    Watch the 2021 online award ceremony for Eve Clark on YouTube.

  • Professor Emerita, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Boston University

    Jean Berko Gleason is the “founding mother of experimental developmental psycholinguistics”. The elicitation method she created (Berko 1958), known now simply as the ‘wug test’, “paved the way for all experimental studies in language acquisition, showing that even very young children can be tested”, not merely observed….Critically, her elicitation method has been invaluable to scholars taking differing perspectives on how children acquire language, “providing a theory-neutral means of assessing what a child knows about the language being used.”

    Her paradigm has been adapted for use in “the study of both normal and less typically-developing children´s acquisition of inflectional morphology in numerous languages,” and deployed “to show the relevance of morphological productivity to [other] fields … (e.g. aphasia, developmental disorders, L2). “In the field of literacy… (s)he set the groundwork for the methods [used] to assess children’s morphological awareness,” and in speech-language pathology, one sees the “impact of her work on present day… and future generations of SLPs, all around the world.”

    Berko Gleason’s life work has extended well beyond morphological acquisition, to include “aspects of language learning [such as] routines and formulaic speech, input, social interaction and gender differences, [and also] aphasia”. She was the “first to show the importance of gender-based analyses of parent-child interactions” and the “impact of parents as collaborators in language construction by young children.” She “brought the spotlight on the important role of fathers as well as mothers in children´s language acquisition, and on the differences and similarities between … parents´ linguistic input and reactions to their sons as compared to their daughters.” “Jean’s work across her career has been a beautiful demonstration of the power of being eclectic, of being open to the full range of communicative phenomena and methodologies to study it.”

    Jean Berko Gleason planted our field’s experimental roots, gathered some of its most valuable and often-cited research data, and advocates for the importance of what we do as IASCL members.

    [Excerpted from the nominating letter (quotes indicate comments from researchers in the field)]

  • Professor Emeritus of Psychology and Linguistics, University of California, Berkeley

    Dan I. Slobin’s research at the interface of psychology and linguistics is rare in both the breadth and depth of the issues he has covered since he began research in this field in the 1960s. Among the topics that stand out are his research on: the cognitive underpinnings of language acquisition, the acquisition of morpho-syntax, the development of form–function relations, narrative skills, the nature of the input in mother-child interaction, relations between language and culture, the role of language in cognition, the encoding of spatial relations, and a variety of explorations into signed languages. Dan’s research and thinking in each area has had a profound influence on the field, and his publications in each domain have strongly influenced both his students and his colleagues, offering guidelines and creating ‘research traditions’. With almost every publication, Dan Slobin has presented a new way of looking at language and at acquisition. For example, his paper on ‘Thinking for speaking’ helped bring language back into cognition, just as his formulation of form-function relations helped bridge the gap between syntax and pragmatics. His emphasis on the importance of language typology and on cross-linguistic comparison as a basic methodology has also contributed to delineating what is general versus what is language-specific in the process of first language acquisition. In short, the many new ideas that stemmed from Dan’s view of the field, and, in particular, his ability to both frame them theoretically and ground them empirically, has had a fundamental impact on the directions taken by research in developmental psycholinguistics over the last several decades.

    His influence internationally has been enormous. His emphasis on cross-linguistic comparison in the study of first language acquisition stimulated, and continues to stimulate, research in many different languages and cultures; it also attracted speakers of diverse languages as students and post-docs in his lab at Berkeley, and this in turn has contributed significantly to the development of our field, adding both cultural variety and greater linguistic diversity.

    He also encouraged growth in the field with workshops and conferences –– always international in composition, and also looking at data from many languages. And these conferences have resulted in publications that have added importantly to the respective national and international research on first language acquisition – notably the four volumes that Dan Slobin edited in the 1980s and 1990s, on The Crosslinguistic Study of Language Acquisition.

    [Excerpted from President Eve Clark's Presentation of the Award]

  • Teresa Heinz Professor of Psychology, Modern Languages, and Computational Linguistics, Carnegie Mellon University.

    Brian MacWhinney has contributed to the fields of first- and second-language acquisition, psycholinguistics, the neurological bases of language, and computational models of language development for over 40 years. He has been active in the IASCL since its inception and acted as President from 1999 to 2002. With Catherine Snow, he co-founded and now directs CHILDES, the Child Language Data Exchange System, and TalkBank. CHILDES has revolutionized the sharing, entry, and analysis of child language data across the globe and has brought together contributions on child language data from over 39 languages, plus data from bilinguals. The free access to data and to the analytical programs that he and his teams have developed has had perhaps the most far-reaching impact on the field of any development in the last 50 years.

    Brian is noted in his own work for his Competition Model of language acquisition, developed in collaboration with Elizabeth Bates, which presents an emergentist perspective of language development. In his own words, "The Competition Model views language processing as a series of competitions between lexical items, phonological forms, and syntactic patterns." The model has been widely tested and supported through research in psycholinguistics, cognitive neuroscience, and cognitive development.

    Brian has also been instrumental in research on connectionist models of language and language development. His work has focused on the emergence of English, German, and Hungarian, and it has helped elucidate the acquisition of morphology, syntax, and the lexicon.

    Brian's contributions to the field and to the IASCL have been so outstanding that he was a clear choice for receiving the first ever Roger Brown award.