Biographical Information

David W. Lightfoot

David W. Lightfoot received a B.A. (Honors) in classics from the University of London, King’s College, in 1966 and a Ph.D. in Linguistics from the University of Michigan in 1971.  His honors include a Fulbright Scholarship, a Ford Foundation Fellowship, an American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship, three National Science Foundation research grants, and various research grants from the University of Maryland.

Dr. Lightfoot writes mainly on syntactic theory, language acquisition, and historical change, which he views as intimately related.  He argues that internal language change is contingent and fluky, takes place in a sequence of bursts, and is best viewed as the cumulative effect of changes in individual grammars, where a grammar is a “language organ” represented in a person’s mind/brain and embodying his/her language faculty.  That, in turn, entails a non-standard view of language acquisition as “cue-based”.  He has published ten books, most recently The Development of Language (Blackwell, 1999), Syntactic Effects of Morphological Change (ed.) (Oxford UP, 2002), and The Language Organ (with S.R. Anderson) (Cambridge UP, 2002).  How New Languages Emerge is now in production with Cambridge UP.  He is also the author of more than 100 articles, book chapters and reviews.  He is general editor for the Generative Syntax series published by Blackwell and serves on the linguistics editorial board at Cambridge University Press.  In 2004 he was elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Dr. Lightfoot has held regular professorial appointments at McGill University, where he taught many undergraduates who went on to become major figures in linguistics and psychology: Mark Baltin, Alan Prince, Michael Rochemont, Alison Gopnik, Elan Dresher, Norbert Hornstein, Amy Weinberg, Renée Baillargeon, Elizabeth Cowper; the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands; and at the University of Maryland, where he established and chaired, for 12 years, a new Department of Linguistics with a unique focus, viewing linguistics as the study of the human language organ.  He was also the Associate Director of the Neuroscience and Cognitive Sciences Program there.  In 2001, he moved to Georgetown University as Dean of the Graduate School.  In addition, he has held short-term appointments at universities in Austria, Brazil, Canada, Germany, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. In 2005, he became Assistant Director of the National Science Foundation, heading the Directorate of Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences.