Duane Girard Watson (born 1976) is an American neuroscientist and professor of psychology and human development at Vanderbilt University. He holds the Frank W. Mayborn Chair in Cognitive Science and leads the Vanderbilt University Communication and Language Laboratory.
Early life and education
Watson is from Las Vegas.[1] Watson studied psychology at Princeton University. He originally intended to be a physician, but a class on linguistics made him change course.[2] He graduated in 1998 and moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts. Here he joined the laboratory of Ted Gibson in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[3] In 2002 Watson earned his doctoral degree. His research considered intonational phrasing (that is, sections of spoken text with a particular intonation patterns) in language comprehension.[4] Watson was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Rochester, where he worked with Michael Tanenhaus.[5][6]
Research and career
He joined the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in 2005, where he established a laboratory that investigates the cognitive processes that underpin language and nonverbal communication.[7][8] He has studied how gesture and emphasis influence long-term communication.[9] This includes analysing how disfluencies impact listener's interpretation of speakers' intentions.[9] As part of this effort, Watson designed an experiment where participants listened to Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Half of the listeners heard the true version of the story and the other half heard a version with disfluencies (such as ums and uhs), and they were asked to retell the chapters after hearing them. Watson showed the people who had heard the stories with disfluencies were better at remembering the story.[9] To ensure that the only reason people recalled the story better was because they were given more time to hear it, he compared the difference between disfluencies (the ums and uhs) and similarly timed coughs.[9] He showed that disfluencies did not only provide more time for processing, but also helped people interpret what they were hearing. They often serve to provide structure to a story, occurring at a major plot junction.[9]
In 2016 Watson joined Vanderbilt University, where he leads the Communication and Language Laboratory (CaLL).[2] CaLL investigate prosody, the patterns and rhythm of spoken word, individual differences in language processing and how language is produced.[10]
Watson, Duane G. (2012). Experimental and Theoretical Advances in Prosody : a Special Issue of Language and Cognitive Processes. Taylor and Francis. ISBN978-1-135-84880-4. OCLC821176237.
Watson, Duane; Gibson, Edward (2004). "The relationship between intonational phrasing and syntactic structure in language production". Language and Cognitive Processes. 19 (6): 713–755. doi:10.1080/01690960444000070. ISSN0169-0965. S2CID18358170.