Doris L. Payne


Doris Lander Payne is an American linguist and professor emerita of linguistics at the University of Oregon. Her research specializes in the morphosyntax of understudied languages, including indigenous languages of the Americas, Nilotic languages and especially Maasai of East Africa, languages of West Africa, Austronesian languages, and others.

Education and research

Payne received her PhD in linguistics from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1985, with a dissertation on the Yagua language entitled Aspects of the Grammar of Yagua: A Typological Perspective. After completing her dissertation, she took up an academic position at the University of Oregon, becoming a full professor there in 2002. She is also a linguistics consultant for SIL International.
She is known for her widely cited research on topics such as external possession, information structuring in O'odham, the pragmatics of word order, and noun classification systems.
From 1998 to 2003, Payne led an National Science Foundation-funded research project on the Maasai language. A dictionary and other language documentation resources resulted from the project. From 2013 to 2019, she led an National Science Foundation-funded research project aimed at documenting the Nivaclé and Pilagá languages of northern Argentina.

Honors

Payne is co-editor-in-chief of the International Journal of American Linguistics.

Selected publications