Richard Schmidt (1941–2017)[1] was an American linguist and professor in the Department of Language Studies, University of Hawaii.
His chief research interests were cognitive factors and affective factors in adult second-language acquisition,[2] and he was most known for developing the noticing hypothesis.
[3] He was the president of the American Association for Applied Linguistics in 2003, and most recently served as a senior consultant for the National Foreign Language Resource Center at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.
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