Program
Tuesday, May 25th
8:30 Registration and welcome
9.00 – 9.20 : The syllabic priming effect in visual word recognition: Under what conditions? Fabienne Chetail & Alain Content (LCLD, Université Libre de Bruxelles)
9.20 – 9.40 : Transcortical inhibition during foveal word recognition. Lise Van der Haegen & Marc Brysbaert (Ghent University )
9.40 – 10.00 : Neologisms: Do they leave a modality specific trace or a general trace? Laura de Vaan, Winie van den Bosch, Mirjam Ernestus, & Robert Schreuder (Max Planck, Nijmegen)
10.00 – 10.20 : Phonographic processing units in German. Sandra Beyermann (Ghent University)
10.20 – 10.40 : Linking en in Dutch compounds activates plural semantics: a study with regional speech variants. Esther Hanssen, Arina Banga, Robert Schreuder, Anneke Neijt (Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands)
10.40 – 11.00 : Response congruency effects in masked primed lexical decision. Sebastian Loth and Colin J. Davis (Royal Holloway, University of London)
11.00 - 11.30 Coffee break
11.30 – 11.50 : Discourse Deixis in Narrative Discourse. Derya Çokal-Karadaş, Patrick Sturt, Fernanda Ferreira, Şükriye Ruhi (University of Edinburgh, Middle East Technical University)
11.50 – 12.10 : A Multidimensional approach for exploring Idiom's Comprehension and Processing: The interplay between psycholinguistic factors and cerebral asymmetry. Tal Sela, Michal Lavidor (Bar Ilan University, Israel)
12.10 – 12.30 : On domain differences in categorization and context variety. Steven Verheyen, Daniel Heussen, and Gert Storms (University of Leuven)
12.30 - 14.00 Lunch
14.00 – 15.00 : Keynote speaker James McQueen (University of Nijmegen, Max Planck) Flexibility and abstraction in speech and voice recognition.
15.00 – 15.20 : Neural mechanism underlying orthographic influence on speech processing: A combined transcranial magnetic stimulation and behavioral study. Chotiga Pattamadilok, Iris N. Knierim, Keith Duncan & Joseph T. Devlin (Université Libre de Bruxelles, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences Leipzig, University College London)
15.20 – 15.40 : Lexical competition in a spoken sentence context. Evelyne Lagrou, Rob Hartsuiker, & Wouter Duyck (Ghent University )
15.40 – 16.00 : Frequency effects on morphological processing in English L1 and L2 speakers. Lissy Otto, Marc Brysbaert, & Kathleen Rastle (Royal Holloway, University of London)
16.00 – 17.30 : coffee and posters
Syntactic priming within and between languages: Evidence for a shared syntax in trilinguals. Saskia Beerts, Maaike Loncke, Timothy Desmet and Robert J. Hartsuiker (Ghent University)
The neural correlates of grammatical encoding: An fMRI study. Collina, S., Seurinck R., Hartsuiker, R. (Università degli Studi Suor Orsola Benincasa, Ghent University)
Interaction between long-term memory traces and acoustic analysis in vowel discrimination: an ERP study. Chizuru Deguchi, Julie Chobert, Angèle Brunellière, Noël Nguyen, Lucia Colombo, Mireille Besson (University of Padua, CNRS-Marseille, CNRS & Aix-Marseille University)
The source of masked priming: the mental lexicon or the episodic memory. Kris Dekker & Dominiek Sandra (University of Antwerp)
Locality Effects in German WH-Sentences. Simon Hopp (University of Konstanz )
Neurophysiological evidence for verb-class dependent word order processing in Italian. Laura Maffongelli, Alexander Dröge, & Ina Bornkessel-Schlesewsky (University of Marburg)
Morphological family size effects in bilingual word recognition. Kimberley Mulder, Ton Dijkstra & Rob Schreuder (University of Nijmegen, Max Planck)
17.30 – 18.00 : Guest speaker: Laurie Feldman: Farmers farm but corners don’t corn even at the onset of facilitation. (Laurie Beth Feldman & Fermin Moscoso del Prado Martin)
20:00 Workshop Dinner
Wednesday, May 26th
9.00 – 9.20 : How preferences in German for prepositional object or double-object dative structures influence the syntactic priming effect in reading comprehension. Kirsten Weber, Katrien Segaert, Peter Hagoort (University Nijmegen, Max-Planck)
9.20 – 9.40 : Processing the not-because ambiguity in English: the role of pragmatics and prosody. Yukiko Koizumi (Yamagata University)
9.40 – 10.00 : Human and Neural Network Processing of Garden Path Sentences: A Performance Comparison. Susan Schweitzer and David Pereplyotchik (Graduate Center CUNY)
10.00 – 10.20 : Syntax is shared between comprehension and production: An fMRI syntactic priming study across language modalities. K. Segaert, L. Menenti, K. Weber, K.M. Petersson & P. Hagoort (Max Planck, University Nijmegen)
10.20 – 10.40 : Memory-Based Learning of the constraints on prenominal adjective order. Bram Vandekerckhove, Walter Daelemans, & Dominiek Sandra (University of Antwerp)
10.40 – 11.00 : The span of phonological encoding in the production of several words. Violaine Michel Lange and Marina Laganaro (University of Neuchâtel)
11.00 - 11.30 Coffee break
11.30 – 11.50 : Noun and verb cognate similarity. Sybrine Bultena, Ton Dijkstra and Janet G. van Hell (Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen)
11.50 – 12.10 : Allomorphy and its morphophonological correlates: Serbian instrumental of masculine nouns. Tamara Jovanovic & Petar Milin (University of Novi Sad)
12.10 – 12.30 : Semantic processing asymmetries in the hemispheres: a puzzling example for lateralization of coarse semantic integration in Hebrew. Nili Metuki, Haim Dubossarsky & Michal Lavidor (Bar Ilan University, Israel)
12.30 - 14.00 Lunch
14.00 – 15.00 : Keynote speaker David A. Balota (Washington University) Is there Meat in the Tail of Reaction Time Distributions? Constraining Interpretations of Lexical Processing Models
15.00 – 15.20 : Measuring lexical competition through visual perception: A transition analysis of eye movements. Lisa Vandeberg (Erasmus University Rotterdam)
15.20 – 15.40 : Morphological segmentation during sentence reading. Widmann, Cintia (European Masters in Clinical Linguistics)
15.40 – 16.00 : Embedded words in visual word recognition: Does the left hemisphere see the rain in brain? Samantha F. McCormick, Colin J. Davis, & Marc Brysbaert (Royal Holloway, University of London)
16.00 – 16.20 : Schwa reduction in Dutch word initial syllables. Iris Hanique, Barbara Schuppler, & Mirjam Ernestus (University Nijmegen, Max Planck Institute)
16.20 – 16.40 : Effects of fluctuating noise on language production: a priming experiment. Mirko Hanke, Cornelia Hamann, & Esther Ruigendijk (University of Oldenburg)
16.40 – 17.00 : Semantic Interference in Immediate and Delayed Word Production: Role of Attentional Control. Vitória Magalhães Piai, Ardi Roelofs, and Herbert Schriefers (University of Nijmegen)
17.00 Coffee or beer