People

Crowd of people attending a lecture

Project team

Professor Michaela Mahlberg (PI), University of Birmingham

Photograph of Professor Michaela MahlbergProfessor Mahlberg is the Chair in Corpus Linguistics and the Director of the Centre for Corpus Research at the University of Birmingham. Her research focuses on language as a social phenomenon. A large part of Professor Mahlberg’s research deals with the language of Dickens’s fiction, literary linguistics, and discourse analysis. She is the editor of the International Journal of Corpus Linguistics (published by John Benjamins) and, together with Gavin Brookes, she edits the book series Corpus and Discourse (published by Bloomsbury). She is the Vice President of the international Dickens Society, she is a Fellow of the Alan Turing Institute in London, and she hosts the podcast “Life and Language”.


Professor Stephanie Evert (PI), FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg

Photo of Stephanie EvertProfessor Dr. Stephanie Evert is Chair of Computational Corpus Linguistics at Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg. After studying mathematics, physics and English linguistics, she received a PhD degree in computational linguistics from the University of Stuttgart, Germany. Her research interests encompass the quantitative methodology of corpus linguistics, multivariate analysis and distributional semantics, applied corpus studies and digital humanities, tools for processing large text corpora, the combination of human interpretation with machine learning (digital hermeneutics), as well as language technology and its applications.


Natalie Finlayson (RF), University of Birmingham

Natalie Finlayson

Natalie joined the RC21 team in May 2023, having previously held roles as a Research Associate in Language Education (2022-23) and Learning Resource Developer (2019-2022) at the University of York, and various teaching positions at the University of Glasgow. She received her PhD in English Language and Linguistics from the University of Glasgow in 2022. In her research, she has used corpus methods in combination with other approaches to answer questions in cognitive semantics, EAP, language education, and medical humanities, and to inform the development of materials, tools and methodological processes for applied linguistics purposes. She is assistant editor of the International Journal of Corpus Linguistics.


>Alexander Piperski (RF), FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg

Photo of Alexander PiperskiAfter completing my studies in Germanic Philology at Lomonosov Moscow State University in 2010, I continued my education with M.A. studies in Bremen and Palermo, graduating in 2012. I received my PhD from Lomonosov Moscow State University in 2015, and from then until 2022, I taught corpus linguistics and other related courses at various universities in Moscow. Since 2023, I have been working as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Erlangen–Nuremberg. My research interests include corpus linguistics and quantitative methods in linguistics.