She is a professor in the University of Delaware Linguistics and Cognitive Science Department,[1] best known for her work on the phonology-syntax interface.
Her PhD dissertation is titled, The Syllable in Phonological Theory: With special reference to Italian.
Her widely cited 1986 book with Marina Nespor, Prosodic Phonology, is considered a foundational work in the field of the phonology-syntax interface.
[3][4] Using data drawn from many different languages, the book investigates ways in which syntax and phonology affect one another, and it proposes a cross-linguistic correspondence between prosodic domains (constituents in a prosodic hierarchy) and syntactic constituents within the framework of generative grammar.
Other notable work by Vogel on prosody and its interfaces includes studies motivating the compound and clitic group, distinct from the word or phrase, as domains for phonological processes such as stress and vowel harmony in languages like Turkish, Hungarian, Italian (and other Romance languages).