Session III (Saturday, March 27th)
1. Rapid Syntactic Diagnosis: Separating Effects of Grammaticality and Expectancy
Alison Austin & Colin Phillips (Maryland)
2. Depth of Wh-Embedding: Experimental Evidence for the Convergence of On-line Processing and the Economy of Representation
Markus Bader (Konstanz) & Tom Roeper (Massachusetts)
3. Syntactic templates and linking mechanisms: A new approach to grammatical function asymmetries
Ina Bornkessel (MPI-CNS), Matthias Schlesewsky (Marburg), & Robert D. Van Valin, Jr. (SUNY Buffalo)
4. Discourse Processing and Prosodic Boundaries
Katy Carlson (Morehead State), Lyn Frazier, & Charles Clifton, Jr., (Massachusetts)
5. Early effects of topicality, late effects of parallelism
Katy Carlson (Morehead State) & Michael Walsh Dickey (Northwestern)
6. Reliability of prosodic cues to children in sentence processing
Youngon Choi (Pennsylvania) & Reiko Mazuka (Duke)
7. Similarities and differences in native and non-native sentence production
Susanna Flett, Holly Branigan, & Martin Pickering (Edinburgh)
8. Syntactic focus and first-mention status affect pronoun coreference
Stephani Foraker (NYU)
9. Dependency and length as processing constraints on word order in particle constructions
Laura M. Gonnerman, Celina Hayes, and Anne Jenkins (Lehigh University)
10. The on-line processing of relative clauses in Brazilian Portuguese and English
Ana Gouvea, Colin Phillips, & David Poeppel (Maryland)
11. The Costs of Maintaining Syntactic Predictions in Ambiguity Resolution
Daniel Grodner (Brown University) & Edward Gibson (MIT)
12. Using a Speaker's Eyegaze During Comprehension: A Cue Both Rapid and Flexible
Joy E. Hanna & Susan E. Brennan (SUNY Stony Brook)
13. Agreement Processing in a complex number system
Annabel Harrison (Edinburgh), Rob Hartsuiker (Ghent), Martin Pickering & Holly Branigan (Edinburgh)
14. Age-related effects in communication and audience design
William S. Horton & Daniel H. Spieler (Georgia Tech)
15. Chinese Counterfactual Conditionals
Jean C.-F. Hsu (National Tsing Hua University) Ovid J.-L. Tzeng, & Daisy L. Hung (National Yang Ming University)
16. Effects of phrase order on sentence processing in Chinese double-object structures
Lingyun Ji, Todd Haskell, Elaine Andersen, & John Hawkins (Southern California)
17. Reference resolution in Dutch: What pronouns and demonstratives can tell us
Elsi Kaiser (Rochester) & John Trueswell (Pennsylvania)
18. Effects of prosodic boundaries on ambiguous syntactic clause boundaries in Japanese
Soyoung Kang, Shari Speer, & Mineharu Nakayama (Ohio State)
19. The influence of depicted event scenes on written comprehension of locally ambiguous sentences
Pia Knoeferle, Matthew Crocker (Saarland), & Christoph Scheepers (Dundee)
20. The modulation of lexical repetition effects by discourse context: An ERP study of coreference
Kerry Ledoux, Tamara Y. Swaab (UC Davis), C. Christine Camblin (Duke), & Peter C. Gordon (North Carolina)
21. Noun Phrase Type and Referential Processing in Korean: An Eye-tracking Study
Hanjung Lee, Yoonhyoung Lee, & Peter C. Gordon (North Carolina)
22. On the Role of Pauses and Intonation in the Interpretation Of Sentence-Medial Parenthetical Adverbs in English
Yongeun Lee (Northwestern)
23. Constraints on Variables in Neural Net Syntax
Donald Mathis, Robert Frank, & William Badecker (Johns Hopkins)
24. Word-order and prosody in the attachment of relative clauses in Japanese
Michiko Nakamura (NAIST), Edson T. Miyamoto (U.Tsukuba/NAIST), & Shoichi Takahashi (MIT)
25. On the use of structural and lexical information in second language processing
Akira Omaki (Hawaii) & Ken Ariji (Shinshu)
26. Individual differences in online syntactic processing in monolingual adults as reflected by ERPs
Eric Pakulak & Helen Neville (Oregon)
27. Distinguishing the indistinguishable: Frequency-based analyses of N400 effects
Dietmar Roehm (Marburg), Ina Bornkessel (MPI-CNS), Stefan Frisch (Potsdam), Hubert Haider (Salzburg), & Matthias Schlesewsky (Marburg)
28. Children's Comprehension of Japanese Topicalization and the Role of Referential Context
Tetsuya Sano (Meiji Gakuin/Maryland)
29. The cost of enriched composition: Eye-movement evidence from German
Christoph Scheepers (Dundee), Sibylle Mohr (Saarbruecken), Frank Keller (Edinburgh), & Mirella Lapata (Sheffield)
30. Saying what's on your mind: Working memory effects on syntactic production.
L. Robert Slevc & Victor S. Ferreira (UCSD)
31. Structural Focus and Prosodic Focus in Hungarian
Elisa Sneed (Northwestern)
32. The role of verbal and spatial working memory in
relative clause attachment preferences
Benjamin Swets, Timothy Desmet, David Z. Hambrick, and Fernanda Ferreira
(Michigan State)
33. Long tails of reading time distributions modeled by a self-organizing parser
Aaron Schultz, Whitney Tabor, & Miguel Moreno (Connecticut)
34. (Lack of) context effects during lexical ambiguity resolution
Roger van Gompel (Dundee) & Jamie Pearson (Edinburgh)
35. Constraint defeasibility and concurrent constraint satisfaction in human sentence processing
Shravan Vasishth (Saarland), Christoph Scheepers (Dundee), Hans Uszkoreit, Joel Wagner, & GJM Kruijff (Saarland)
36. Linguistic Focus and Discourse Representation: Evidence from Re-reading.
Peter Ward & Patrick Sturt (Glasgow)
37. Effects of the locality of syntactic dependencies on eye-movements in reading
Tessa Warren (Pittsburgh) & Daniel Grodner (Brown)
38. Adjectival modifiers and reference resolution: when prosodic focus matters
Andrea Weber, Bettina Braun, & Matthew Crocker (Saarland)
39. Interaction between Subject Type and Ungrammaticality in Doubly Center-Embedded Relative Clauses
Carol Whitney & Amy Weinberg (Maryland)
40. Bilingual sentence processing: relative clause attachment in Basque and Spanish
Eider Gutierrez Ziardegi (UPV/EHU), Manuel Carreiras (La Laguna Tenerife), & Itziar Laka (UPV/EHU)