Irene Heim

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Born
Irene Roswitha Heim

(1954-10-30)October 30, 1954
Munich, West Germany
Irene Heim
Born
Irene Roswitha Heim

(1954-10-30)October 30, 1954
Munich, West Germany
AwardsRolf Schock Prize
Fellow of the Linguistic Society of America
Academic background
Alma materUMass Amherst
ThesisThe Semantics of Definite and Indefinite Noun Phrases (1982)
Doctoral advisorBarbara Partee
Academic work
Discipline
Institutions

Irene Roswitha Heim (born October 30, 1954) is a German-American linguist and a leading specialist in semantics.[1] She was a professor at the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin) and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) before moving to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1989, where she is professor emerita of linguistics. She served as head of the Linguistics Section of the Department of Linguistics and Philosophy.

Heim's parents were German speakers born in Czechoslovakia, who had immigrated to Germany after World War II. She attended school in Munich, and studied at the University of Konstanz and LMU Munich, graduating from the latter in 1978 with an M.A. in Linguistics and Philosophy and a minor in mathematics. Following this, she studied for a PhD at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, completing her dissertation in 1982.[2]

After short-term postdoctoral positions at Stanford University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the University of Texas at Austin (1983-1987), and the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), she took up a faculty position at MIT in 1987, receiving tenure as an associate professor in 1993 and becoming promoted to full professor in 1997.[2]

Research

Heim's work played a crucial role in establishing formal semantics as a part of linguistic theory.[3] Her 1982 dissertation The semantics of definite and indefinite noun phrases[4][5] is considered a classic text and a major milestone in formal semantics. In the second chapter of the work she argued (developing an insight by the philosopher David Lewis) that indefinite noun phrases like a cat in the sentence If a cat is not in Athens, she is in Rhodes are not quantifiers but free variables bound by an existential operator inserted in the sentence by a semantic operation that she dubbed existential closure. In the third chapter of the work she developed a compositional dynamic theory of (in)definites. This work, along with Hans Kamp's roughly contemporaneous 'A Theory of Truth and Semantic Representation' (1981), became the founding work in the influential tradition of dynamic semantics and the first compositional dynamic fragment.[2][3]

She is the co-author with Angelika Kratzer of Semantics in Generative Grammar, an influential textbook of formal semantics,[6] and was a founding co-editor (also with Kratzer) of the journal Natural Language Semantics.[2][3]

Awards

References

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