THURSDAY, MARCH 21: POSTER SESSION 1

6:00 - 8:00 pm, Dining Commons, CUNY Graduate Center (Fifth Avenue, between 34th and 35th Streets)

Please click on author name(s) or poster title to view the corresponding abstract.

Gerry T. M. Altmann & Yuki Kamide (University of York) • There's more to this than meets the eye
Vered Argaman & Neal J. Pearlmutter (Northeastern University) • Lexical semantics in sentence processing: The status of semantic category
Suzanne Belanger & Ron Smyth (University of Toronto) • Resolving deep vs. surface anaphors: activation and suppression of linguistic form
Giulia Bencini (New York University), Kathryn Bock & Adele Goldberg (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) • How abstract is grammar? Evidence from structural priming in language production
Moisιs Betancort & Manuel Carreiras (University of La Laguna) • The empty category PRO: Processing what can't be seen
Ina Bornkessel (Max Planck Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, Leipzig ), Matthias Schlesewsky (University of Potsdam) & Angela D. Friederici (Max Planck Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, Leipzig ) • Information structure licenses syntax: An ERP correlate of focus processing
Sarah Brown-Schmidt, M. Ellen Campana & Michael K. Tanenhaus (University of Rochester) • Reference resolution in the wild: How addresses circumscribe referential domains in real time comprehension during interactive problem-solving
Ann Bunger & Michael Walsh Dickey (Northwestern University) • Methods of assessing argument structure preferences: Sentence completion versus argument structure estimation
Timothy Desmet (Ghent University) & Edward Gibson (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) • Comprehension complexity and corpus frequencies in noun phrase conjunction
Victor S. Ferreira (University of California, San Diego) & Zenzi M. Griffin (Georgia Institute of Technology) • Phonological influences on the selection of linguistic expressions
Steven Frisson (University of Antwerp), Martin J. Pickering (University of Edinburgh) & Brian McElree (New York University) • Effects of local and global context on the interpretation of adjective-noun combinations
Susanne Gahl (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign), Douglas Roland & Daniel Jurafsky (University of Colorado, Boulder) • A new resource and methodological considerations on verb subcategorization biases
Silvia Gennari & David Poeppel (University of Maryland) • Representational complexity of verb meanings

Annette Hohenberger & Joerg Keller (University of Frankfurt/Main) • On the amodal nature of the monitor: Sign vs. spoken language processing   

Karin R. Humphreys & Angela Swendsen (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) • Asymmetric lexical bias in speech errors   

Shelia M. Kennison (Oklahoma State University) & Jessie Trofe (Texas Lutheran University) • Binding Theory and language processing: How great a divide?   

Evan Kidd & Edith L. Bavin (La Trobe University) • PP-attachment ambiguity resolution in children   

Ming-Wei Ernest Lee (University of Cambridge) • Implementing subject-verb number agreement in a non-native language   

Brian McElree (New York University), Martin Pickering (University of Edinburgh), Matthew Traxler (University of South Carolina) & Steven Frisson (University of Antwerp) • Enriched composition at the syntax-semantic interface   

Alissa Melinger & Christian Dobel (Max-Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen) • Lexically driven syntactic priming in sentence production   

Lorna Morrow, Patrick Sturt, Anthony Sanford & Linda Moxey (University of Glasgow) • Accessing singular and plural discourse entities during language processing   

Nomi M. Olsthoorn & Gerard A.M. Kempen (Leiden University) • Syntactic priming: A question of choice?   

Anna Papafragou (University of Pennsylvania) & Julien Musolino (Indiana University) • The computation of scalar implicatures during language comprehension: A developmental perspective   

Thomas Pechmann & Dieter Zerbst (University of Leipzig) • The time course of grammatical category activation during lexical access in speech production   

Ralph L. Rose (Northwestern University) • Discourse salience and movement constructions   

Douglas Saddy, Heiner Drenhaus & Stefan Frisch (University of Potsdam) • Constituency, licensing and intrusion in German polarity constructions   

Christoph Scheepers (Saarland University) • Repetition of relative clause attachments in sentence production: Towards an information-theoretical account of syntactic priming   

Irina Sekerina (CUNY Graduate Center), Stefan Frisch & Matthias Schlesewsky (University of Potsdam) • Dislocation without movement: An ERP-study with wh- and scrambled sentences in Russian   

Lewis P. Shapiro (San Diego State University) & Arild G. Hestvik (CUNY Graduate Center) • First-pass parsing of VP-ellipsis   

Ron Smyth (University of Toronto) • Deep vs. surface anaphors: Evidence from adjunct control   

Benjamin Swets & Fernanda Ferreira (Michigan State University) • The scope of syntactic planning in language production   

Matthew Traxler (University of South Carolina), Brian McElree (New York University), Rihana S. Williams (University of South Carolina) & Martin Pickering (University of Edinburgh) • Context effects in coercion   

Mieko Ueno & Maria Polinsky (University of California, San Diego) • Maximizing processing in an SOV language: A corpus study of Japanese and English   

Roger P.G. van Gompel (University of Dundee), Martin J. Pickering (University of Edinburgh) & Jamie Pearson (University of Dundee) • Subcategorisation information in sentence processing: Readers ignore both lexically specific and category-general frequency information   

Jennifer J. Venditti (University of Pennsylvania), Matthew Stone, Preetham Nanda & Paul Tepper (Rutgers University) • Toward an account of accented pronoun interpretation in discourse context: Evidence from eye-tracking   

Hiroko Yamashita (Rochester Institute of Technology), Franklin Chang (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) & Yuki Hirose (The University of Electro Communications, Tokyo ) • Separating functions and positions: Evidence from structural priming in Japanese   

UP
Thursday, March 21: Poster Session 1
Friday, March 22: Poster Session 2


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