Kuroda was born into a prominent family of mathematicians in Japan.
His grandfather, Teiji Takagi, was a student of David Hilbert. Kuroda himself
received degrees in mathematics and linguistics from the University of Tokyo.
In 1962, he entered MIT with the first graduating class from the new Department of Linguistics,
where he wrote his seminal dissertation, Generative Studies in the Japanese Language (1965), under Chomsky's supervision.
Important publications
"Classes of languages and linear-bounded automata", Information and Control, 7(2): 207–223, June 1964.
"Whether We Agree or Not : A Comparative Syntax of English and Japanese", in: William J. Poser (ed.) Papers from the Second International Workshop on Japanese Syntax, 103–142. Stanford, CA: CSLI Publications, 1988.
In 2013, the Association for Mathematics of Language, an affiliate of the Association for Computational Linguistics, established the S.-Y. Kuroda Prize to honor "work that has spawned a broad area of research" within mathematical linguistics. The prize has been awarded at most biennially.[1]
In 2017, the Linguistic Society of America established a fellowship in his honor. It provides funding to Japanese students to attend the Linguistic Society's biennial summer institute.[2]