Rice and fellow linguist Joyce McDonough were awarded a grant from the US National Science Foundation in 2009 for "An Interactive Speech Atlas of Dene Speaking Communities in the Mackenzie Basin".
Canadian Indigenous Languages and Literacy Development Institute (CILLDI)
Sally Rice was part of a collective of language advocates and educators which including Donna Paskemin and Heather Blair, who established CILLDI in 1999 with its first summer institute held on the Onion Lake First Nation, Saskatchewan offering one course entitled "Expanding Cree Language and Literacy". CILLDI, which is hosted at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, is an intensive annual "summer school for Indigenous language activists, speakers, linguists, and teachers." It is a "multicultural, cross-linguistic, interdisciplinary, inter-regional, inter-generational" initiative. Rice is on the CILLDI Advisory Council.
Publications
2011. Newman, John, Sally Rice, and Harald Baayen. Corpus-Based Studies in Language Use, Language Learning, and Language Documentation. Amsterdam: Rodopi. 2011. Rice, Sally and John Newman. Experimental and Empirical Methods in the Study of Conceptual Structure, Discourse, and Language. Stanford: CSLI/University of Chicago Press. 2010. Ives, John W., Sally Rice, and Edward Vajda. "Dene-Yeniseian and processes of deep change in kin terminologies." In Kari, J. and B. Potter, Anthropological Papers of the University of Alaska, Vol. 6 : 161-187. Fairbanks: UAF Press. 2007. Rice, Sally and Kaori Kabata. "Cross-linguistic grammaticalization patterns of the ALLATIVE." Linguistic Typology 11: 453-516. 2004. Newman, John and Sally Rice. "Patterns of usage for English SIT, STAND, and LIE: A cognitively-inspired exploration in corpus linguistics." Cognitive Linguistics 15: 351-396. 1999. Rice, Sally. "Patterns of acquisition in the emerging mental lexicon: The case of to and for in English." Brain and Language 68:268-276. 1995. Sandra, Dominiek and Sally Rice. "Network analyses of prepositional meaning: Mirroring whose mind—the linguist’s or the language user’s?" Cognitive Linguistics 6:89-130.