Tania Ahmad is a third year PhD scholar in Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland. She is working on morphosyntactic properties like Alignment, Subjecthood and Transitivity prominence in Old Germanic languages (Old English, Old Norse and Gothic). She has been working as a PhD student in the project ASTRAPIE, an NCN-funded two years research grant. Her linguistic expertise include syntax, semantics, morphology and typology and her research affinities centre around historical morphosyntax, Corpus Linguistics and Forensic Linguistics.
PhD student and part-time lecturer at the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań. My PhD research concerns the historical verbal morphology of the Slavic and Baltic branches and its wider Indo-European connections. My main research interest is historical and derivational morphology, but I am also interested in morphosyntax, phonology, and etymology. I teach classes on Dutch as a foreign language.
Henrik Hornecker is a PhD student and research fellow at Humboldt-Universtität zu Berlin (Historical-Comparative Linguistics/Indo-European Studies). In his PhD, he is investigating verb valency in Gothic, but he is also doing research on verb valency phenomena in other languages like Old Lithuanian. Further research interests are gender and case morphology (and their development in Indo-European) as well as word formation and etymology.
Diego Luinetti is a postdoctoral researcher at 'Guglielmo Marconi' University in Rome. His research focuses on historical linguistics, including Ancient Greek impersonal constructions, adjectival typology in Ancient Greek, Old Church Slavonic, and Classical Armenian, as well as the verbal system of Old Georgian. He studied at the University of Milan (BA and MA), G. Marconi University in Rome (PhD), and Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań (visiting).
Leonardo Montesi is a PhD candidate in Linguistics at 'Guglielmo Marconi' University (Rome), where he is conducting doctoral research on Old Indo-Aryan -ti- and -tu- derivatives. His primary research interests encompass Indo-European linguistics, with a particular focus on Indo-Iranian, derivational morphology, and Indo-European poetics. He serves as a Teaching Assistant (It. 'cultore della materia') for the courses in Historical Linguistics and Ancient Greek Linguistics at the University of Pisa.
Mohammad Tavakoli is a 4th year PhD student in Adam Mickiewicz University. His interest lies within interdisciplinary areas where knowledge of theoretical linguistics meets with technical expertise in computational/statistical methods. The greater bulk of his experience is related to the same interdisciplinary domains in which he has carried out various projects and worked on several papers.