I obtained a Magister (Freiburg, 1993), an MA (King's College London, 1994), and a PhD (philosophy, Bern, 1996), before becoming a Swiss-government funded postdoctoral researcher in Stuttgart (1996-7) and New York (1997-9). I was first employed in an academic position as Assistant Professor in Regensburg (1999), then as Lecturer at the Universitat van Amsterdam (2003-2006), before becoming a full professor at Durham University (2006-2014) and an ICREA Research Professor in Barcelona in April 2013. I also was a guest professor at Hong Kong University (2010) and at Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona (2011).
Research interests
I study the structural organization and function of language in the human mind/brain. My current research largely focuses on how disorders of language and cognition illuminate the relation between these two. The theoretical basis of this research is laid down in a series of monographs (Mind Design, 2006), An Essay on Names and Truth, 2007), and The Philosophy of Universal Grammar, 2013), all from Oxford University Press. The mental disorders my group studies was psychosis at first, after which we included autism, dementia, aphasia, and syndromic developmental disorders. I have directed three international projects (NWO, 2006-2011; AHRC/DFG, 2009-2012; AHRC, 2014-2017), and three Spanish ones. In Barcelona I have founded and direct the Grammar & Cognition lab (www.graclab.com), which pursues the project of a typology of linguistic diversity across clinical populations, using a range of methods from behavioural linguistic analysis to MRI to EEG to machine learning.
Selected publications
- Hinzen W, Martin T & Wiltschko M 2024, 'A new argument for linguistic determinants of human thought', Linguistics and philosophy, 47 - 1027 - 1043.
- He R, Palominos C, Zhang H, Alonso-Sánchez MF, Palaniyappan L & Hinzen W 2024, 'Navigating the semantic space: Unraveling the structure of meaning in psychosis', Psychiatry research, 333 -115752.
- Hinzen W & Palaniyappan L 2024, 'The 'L-factor': Language as a transdiagnostic dimension in psychopathology', Progress in neuro-psychopharmacology & biological psychiatry, 131 -110952.
- He R, Yuan XF & Hinzen W 2024, 'Episodic Thinking in Alzheimer's Disease Through the Lens of Language', American journal of speech-language pathology, 33 - 1 - 87 - 95.
- Tovar A, Perry SJ, Muñoz E, Painous C, Santacruz P, Ruiz-Idiago J, Mareca C & Hinzen W 2024, 'Understanding of referential dependencies in Huntington's disease', Neuropsychologia, 197 -108845.
- Alonso-Sánchez MF, Hinzen W, He R, Gati J & Palaniyappan L 2024, 'Perplexity of utterances in untreated first-episode psychosis: an ultra-high field MRI dynamic causal modelling study of the semantic network', Journal of psychiatry & neuroscience, 49 - 4 - E252 - E262.
- He R, Alonso-Sánchez MF, Sepulcre J, Palaniyappan L & Hinzen W 2024, 'Changes in the structure of spontaneous speech predict the disruption of hierarchical brain organization in first-episode psychosis', Human brain mapping, 45 - 14 - e70030.
- He R, Al-Tamimi J, Sanchez-Benavides G, Montana-Valverde G, Gispert JD, Grau-Rivera O, Suarez-Calvet M, Minguillon C, Fauria K, Navarro A, Hinzen W 2024, 'Atypical cortical hierarchy in Aß-positive older adults and its reflection in spontaneous speech', Brain research, 1830 - 148806.
- Palominos C, He R, Fröhlich K, Muelfarth RR, Seuffert S, Sommer IE, Homan P, Kircher T, Stein F & Hinzen W 2024, 'Approximating the semantic space: word embedding techniques in psychiatric speech analysis', Schizophrenia, 10 - 1 -114.
Selected research activities
PI: TRUSTING, Horizon2020; DELTA, ERC-Synergy