

BSc Experimental Linguistics (International Programme)
About this course
Experimental linguistics applies the methods of scientific inquiry to the study of human language, treating language not as an abstract system to be described theoretically but as a cognitive and social phenomenon to be investigated through controlled observation and measurement. The field draws on psychology, neuroscience, computational modelling, and phonetics alongside linguistics proper, asking questions about how people acquire language, how they process speech and meaning in real time, how the brain represents linguistic knowledge, and how language varies across individuals and populations. It is a discipline that rewards curiosity about the mechanics of communication and a willingness to work with empirical data rigorously. Studying the experimental linguistics international programme at University College London, you will engage with the full range of methods used in modern language science: psycholinguistic experiments, acoustic analysis, corpus study, neuroimaging data, and computational modelling are all part of the toolkit you will develop. UCL is one of the world's leading centres for linguistics research, and studying here means you will be working alongside scholars who are shaping the field. The four-year international programme structure reflects UCL's global orientation and the genuinely international character of language science as a discipline. Alongside experimental methods, you will build strong foundations in linguistic theory, including phonology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics, so that your empirical work is grounded in a deep understanding of what language is and how it is organised. You will learn to design experiments, collect and analyse data, and interpret findings critically, skills that are central to any scientific discipline and highly valued across many professional contexts. Graduates in experimental linguistics pursue careers in speech and language technology, where companies developing voice assistants, translation tools, and speech recognition systems need people who understand how language actually works. Clinical careers in speech and language therapy, educational psychology, and audiology are also reachable with further training. Academic research, either at masters level or through doctoral programmes, is another prominent route, and many graduates go on to contribute to foundational research in cognitive science, artificial intelligence, and linguistics. Roles in data analysis, user research, and communications also draw on the analytical skills this degree builds.
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