POSTER SESSION 1 Thursday, March 23, 6:00-8:00, Concourse Level Lobby and Break-Out Rooms
Inbal Arnon (Stanford University) • Relative clauses that children understand: NP type effects on child processing Sarah Bernolet, Rob Hartsuiker (Ghent University) & Martin Pickering (University of Edinburgh) • Word order and language production in bilinguals: Evidence from syntactic priming Aleth Bolt (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam) • The complexity of two types of grammatical metaphor Holly P. Branigan, Janet F. McLean, Kate Thatcher & Manon W. Jones (University of Edinburgh) • A blue cat or a cat that is blue? Abstract syntax in young children’s noun phrase production Petra Burkhardt (University of Potsdam, University of Marburg), Gisbert Fanselow (University of Potsdam) & Matthias Schlesewsky (University of Marburg) • Conflict resolution involving coordination constructions Letícia Sicuro Corrêa (Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro) • Do sex and syntax go hand in hand? An alternative account to semantic and contextual effects in the processing of grammatical gender agreement Jennifer Cupit, Elizabeth Rochon, Ron Smyth (University of Toronto) & Carol Leonard (University of Ottawa) • The influence of lexical items on syntactic production: Results of reaction time and sentence type analyses Roberto G. de Almeida, Julia C. Di Nardo & Michael W. von Grünau (Concordia University) • Looking at objects of verbs in dynamic scenes: Effects of verb type and agent motion direction Claire Delle Luche (Laboratoire Dynamique du Langage), Roger P. G. Van Gompel (University of Dundee), Frédérique Gayraud & Bruno Martinie (Laboratoire Dynamique du Langage) • Relative pronouns as accessibility markers Josep Demestre & José E. García-Albea (Universitat Rovira i Virgili) • Brain responses to mood anomalies in Spanish Timothy Desmet, Mieke Declercq (Ghent University) & Edward Gibson (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) • Priming of syntactic configurational information William Evans (University of Massachusetts Amherst) • Inclusiveness and the Small World Requirement: Singling-out Entities from Plural Sets Thomas A Farmer, Sarah A. Cargill, Nicholas C. Hindy, Rick Dale & Michael J. Spivey (Cornell University) • Mouse-tracking the visual world: Streaming x,y coordinates imply continuous interaction during on-line language processing Ruth Filik, Anthony J. Sanford, Catherine Emmott & Lorna Morrow (University of Glasgow) • Pronouns without antecedents: The processing cost of "institutional they" Stephani Foraker (The University of Chicago) & Brian McElree (New York University) • The role of prominence in pronoun resolution: Availability versus accessibility Kerstin Hadelich & Matthew Crocker (Saarland University) • Gaze alignment of interlocutors in conversational dialogues Yi Ting Huang & Jesse Snedeker (Harvard University) • Bilingual spoken language comprehension: Understanding linguistic architecture within real-time processing T. Florian Jaeger, Neal Snider, Laura Staum & Daniel Jurafsky (Stanford University) • (In)dependence of lexical and syntactic production: that-reduction and omission in spontaneous speech Shelia M. Kennison, J. Michael Bowers & Kimberly D. Bates (Oklahoma State University) • The effect of referential processing on the use of verb information during sentence processing Evan Kidd (University of Manchester), Silke Brandt, Elena Lieven & Michael Tomasello (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology) • Are object relatives really so hard? Children process syntax with multiple constraints Sunfa Kim & Gail Mauner (University at Buffalo) • Priming vs. contingency learning accounts of structural priming effects in comprehension Pia Knoeferle & Matthew W. Crocker (Saarland University) • Effects of "blank screen" and disappearing events on the greater relative importance of depicted events Helene Kreysa (University of Edinburgh), Christian Dobel & Pienie Zwitserlood (University of Münster) • Where is the action? An eyetracking study investigating the description of photorealistic events Nayoung Kwon, Maria Polinsky & Robert Kluender (UC-San Diego) • Last resort gap strategy in processing long-distance dependencies Heidi Lorimor, Erica Middleton & Kathryn Bock (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) • One and one makes singular agreement Kazunaga Matsuki, Maryellen C. MacDonald (University of Wisconsin–Madison), Jelena Mirkovic & Silvia Gennari (University of York) • The role of animacy in Japanese relative clause production Michiaki Matsumoto (Kyushu Lutheran College) & Hiroko Yamashita (Rochester Institute of Technology) • Structural Priming within a Foreign Language Alissa Melinger (Saarland University) • The influence of thematic role assignment on structural priming Ana Molina and Victor Ferreira (University of California, San Diego) • Do speakers repeat syntactic structures for their addressees? Veena A. Nair & Amit Almor (University of South Carolina) • Measuring referential processes in sentences and discourse Andrew Nevins (Harvard University) & Brian Dillon (University of Maryland) & Colin Phillips (University of Maryland) • Dimensions of agreement violation in Hindi: An ERP study Shukhan Ng (Graduate Center, CUNY) • Empty category interpretation overrides Minimal Attachment in Chinese Hajime Ono, Masaya Yoshida, (University of Maryland, College Park), Sachiko Aoshima (American University) & Colin Phillips (University of Maryland, College Park) • Real-time processing of Japanese exclamatives and the strength of locality conditions Anna Papafragou (University of Delaware), Justin Hulbert (University of Oregon) & John Trueswell (University of Pennsylvania) • Mapping event perception onto language: Evidence from eye movements Florencia Reali & Morten H. Christiansen (Cornell University) • Distributional information and referential constraints affect on-line processing of pronominal relative clauses [WITHDRAWN] Erica dos Santos Rodrigues & Letícia Sicuro Corrêa (Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro) • Semantic and morphophonological interference in the production of agreement errors: The role of a monitoring parser Hannah Rohde, Andrew Kehler & Jeffrey Elman (UC San Diego) • Aspectual effects on pronoun interpretation Hiromu Sakai (Hiroshima University), Naomi Harada (ATR Institute International), Megumi Yoshimura (Japanese Science and Technology Agency & Hiroshima University), Maiko Shiraishi, Jun-Ichi Tanaka & Makoto Miyatani (Hiroshima University) • Mismatch of social rank features elicits syntactic positive shift: An ERP study of Japanese honorific constructions Kyung Sook Shin (University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa) • Gender and discourse prominence in Korean EFL learners’ on-line processing of English reference Juan F Silva-Pereyra & Manuel Carreiras (University of La Laguna) • An ERP study of phi-features in Spanish L. Robert Slevc & Jeremy K. Boyd (University of California, San Diego) • Optionality in comparative production Katharina Spalek (Radboud University Nijmegen & University of Pennsylvania) & Herbert Schriefers (Radboud University Nijmegen) • Grammatical gender priming within and between semantic categories Rachel S. Sussman, Natalie M. Klein, Greg Carlson & Michael K. Tanenhaus (University of Rochester) • Weak Definites: Evidence for a new class of definite NP interpretation Jun-Ichi Tanaka, Katsuo Tamaoka & Hiromu Sakai (Hiroshima University) • Syntactic priming effects in the processing of a head-final language Malathi Thothathiri & Jesse Snedeker (Harvard University) • Structural priming during comprehension of datives Matthew J. Traxler (University of California at Davis), Martin J. Pickering (University of Edinburgh), Kristen Tooley, Kerry Ledoux & Tamara Y. Swaab (University of California at Davis) • Priming in sentence comprehension: Semantic, strategic, or syntactic? Roger P.G. van Gompel (University of Dundee), Manabu Arai (University of Edinburgh) & Jamie Pearson (University of Edinburgh) • Structural priming magnitudes are affected by frequency of the prime structure Elizabeth Wonnacott, Elissa L. Newport & Michael K. Tanenhaus (University of Rochester) • Acquiring and processing verb argument structures: A miniature language study Fuyun Wu, Todd Haskell, and Elaine Andersen (University of Southern California) • The interaction of lexical, syntactic, and discourse factors in on-line Chinese parsing: Evidence from eye tracking Masaya Yoshida, Sachiko Aoshima, Hajime Ono & Colin Phillips (University of Maryland, College Park) • Conditionals and long-distance dependency formation in Japanese [ PAPERS ] [ THURSDAY POSTERS ] [ FRIDAY POSTERS ] [ SATURDAY POSTERS ] |