Herb Clark
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Herbert H. Clark (Herb Clark) is an eminent psycholinguist, who works as a Professor in the Department of Psychology at Stanford University. His body of work on conversational pragmatics, conducted with a number of collaborators over the years, initially flew in the face of predominant psychological, philosophical, and linguistic theories in the 1980s. Eventually, however, the process evidence for a Collaborative Model of language use turned the tide, and now several of Clark's papers from the 1980s have become classics that are required reading even in the 2000s.[citation needed]
[edit] External links
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Orphaned articles from October 2006 | All orphaned articles | Articles lacking sources from October 2006 | All articles lacking sources | Stanford University faculty | American scientist stubs | Psychology stubs