Publications

Displaying 1 - 9 of 9
  • Araújo, S., Reis, A., Faísca, L., & Petersson, K. M. (in press). Brain sensitivity to words and the “word recognition potential”. In D. Marques, & J. H. Toscano (Eds.), De las neurociencias a la neuropsicologia: el estúdio del cerebro humano. Barranquilla, Colombia: Corporación Universitaria Reformada.
  • Bauer, B. L. M. (in press). Evolution of counting systems. In E. Aldridge, A. Breitbarth, K. É. Kiss, A. Ledgeway, J. Salmon, & A. Simonenko (Eds.), Wiley Blackwell companion to diachronic linguistics. Oxford: Wiley Blackwell.
  • Bauer, B. L. M. (in press). Latin varieties and the study of language. Social stratification in language evolution. In Latin vulgaire - latin tardif XIV. Turnhout: Brepols.
  • Hagoort, P. (in press). Fodor, Bruner and beyond. Human Arenas: The Max Planck Papers.
  • Hustá, C., Meyer, A. S., & Drijvers, L. (in press). Using rapid invisible frequency tagging (RIFT) to probe the attentional distribution between speech planning and comprehension. Neurobiology of Language.
  • Kabak, B., & Zora, H. (in press). Psycholinguistics and Turkish: Prosodic representations and processing. In L. Johanson (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Turkic Languages and Linguistics. Leiden: Brill.

    Abstract

    Psycholinguistic investigations provide invaluable empirical utility in theorizing and typologizing phonological phenomena. Instrumental approaches to the sound structure of Turkish have proven to be no exception here, contributing independent and multi-faceted evidence towards theory building and testing. Two areas of Turkish phonology in relation to suprasegmental structure and prominence patterns, namely word-level prosody (Section 2) and prominence and rhythmic phenomena at the level of the sentence and beyond (Section 3) have particularly fueled psycholinguistically motivated empirical studies. This chapter will approach representational and processing-related issues in each of these and provide a review of pertinent perception and production studies, touching upon phonetic and developmental investigations insofar as they have implications for mental representations or processing.
  • Ozker, M., & Hagoort, P. (in press). Susceptibility to auditory feedback manipulations and individual variability. PLOS ONE.
  • Quaresima, A., Fitz, H., Hagoort, P., & Duarte, a. R. (in press). Nonlinear dendritic integration supports Up-Down states in single neurons. The Journal of Neuroscience.
  • Zora, H., Bowin, H., Heldner, M., Riad, T., & Hagoort, P. (in press). Lexical and information structure functions of prosody and their relevance for spoken communication: Evidence from psychometric and EEG data. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

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