PhD Student Graduate Teaching Assistant Emre is a PhD student in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Georgia (UGA). Emre's primary area of research is psycho-neurolinguistics, and he is currently working on real-time sentence processing using eye-tracking methods. He is also interested in Turkish syntax and cognitive aspects of second language acquisition. He is currently collaborating with the fellow researchers in the Brain, Aphasia and Related Conditions (BARC) Lab in the Department of Communication Sciences and Special Education to design experiments and develop experiment materials. Education Education: MA in Applied Linguistics and TESOL, The University of Alabama BA in Foreign Language Education, Middle East Technical University Research Areas of Interest: Language Acquisition Phonetics and Phonology Syntax and Morphology Psycholinguistics and Neurolinguistics Selected Publications Selected Publications: Keser, A. E. (2026). Reflexivity, agreement, and binding domains in Turkish: Rethinking the analysis of pronominal structures. UGA Working Papers in Linguistics, 9. https://ling.franklin.uga.edu/working-papers-vol-9-2026 Courses Taught Courses Taught: LING 2100E