
Recognized in the National System of Researchers (SNII) in Area V Humanities
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Research
• Interdisciplinary guidelines via a fractal metaphor• Chaos, complexity, creativity: playing with images
• Detecting socio-semantic communities in the analysis of tweets on social networks
• An element of Maya substrate influence in Yucatecan Spanish: word order
• Conversational strength between men and women's conversations
Profile
Dr. Rosa Lema Labadie D'Arce earned her Ph.D. in Anthropology from the National Autonomous University of Mexico. Throughout her career, she served as a Research Professor in the undergraduate and graduate programs in Linguistics at the Iztapalapa campus and in the undergraduate Design program at the Cuajimalpa campus of the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana (UAM). Additionally, she supervised undergraduate and graduate theses at various institutions, including the Azcapotzalco and Iztapalapa campuses of UAM, UAEM, and UANL.
Before her retirement, she held the position of Full-Time Research Professor, Category C, in the Division of Communication and Design Sciences, Department of Design Theory and Processes, at the Cuajimalpa campus. She was a member of the National System of Researchers at Level 1 and held the Promep Profile recognition.
Her notable publications include: Los diálogos del Calepino de Motul: exploraciones en la historiografía de la otredad (Lincom Europa, Amerindia 1, Munich, 2002); Discurso, sociedad y lenguaje: una anamorfosis en el nuevo milenio (Pragmatics 12, Lincom Europa, Munich, 2003), co-authored with Hodge B. and H. Saettele; "El sueño y el recuerdo en High Plains Drifter: Incertidumbre y reflectáforas" (Revista de Humanidades, ITESM, Monterrey, 2005); "La colonie du nouveau monde y Le sommeil des dieux: una lectura contrastiva de dos discursos caribeños" in Femenino/masculino en las literaturas de América. Escrituras en contraste II (UAM Iztapalapa, Mexico, 2005); and "Caos, complejidad, Western: algunas bifurcaciones" (Escritos, BUAP, 2008).
Her research areas spanned Linguistics, Maya Culture, Cultural Theory, Social Semiotics, Pragmatics, Discourse Analysis, and Theories of Chaos, Complexity, and Creativity.