Katie Tetzloff
Assistant Professor
Ph.D. 2022, University Massachusetts Amherst

Personal Website: ktetzloff.wordpress.com
Katerina's research spans the fields of phonology and speech language pathology. In
phonology, she investigates cross-linguistic interactions in bilingual phonological
systems, with a particular interest in heritage speakers of Spanish in the U.S. She
uses experimental methods to examine how bilinguals navigate competing phonological
constraints, and she aims to model these patterns using both theoretical and computational
approaches. She is also interested in using fMRI to investigate the neural underpinnings
of bilingual phonological representations and processing. In speech language pathology,
her work centers on how listeners perceive and adapt to speech degraded by motor speech
disorders, such as dysarthria and apraxia of speech. Rather than focusing solely on
the speaker with the speech disorder, her research emphasizes the role of the listener,
investigating how perceptual learning can be used to improve intelligibility of the
disordered speech. By shifting part of the communicative burden from the speaker to
the listener, this work aims to improve real-world communication outcomes for individuals
with motor speech disorders.
