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Language and Cognitive Processes

最近発刊の雑誌の目次より: Language and Cognitive Processes © Psychology Press, part of the Taylor & Francis Group
  • Situating language production within the matrix of human cognition: The state of the art in language production research
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 99999, No. 1. (2008), pp. 1-6.
    by Matthew Goldrick, Albert Costa, Niels O Schiller
    posted by 1 person hkreysa
  • Reference production: Production-internal and addressee-oriented processes
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 23, No. 4. (June 2008), pp. 495-527.
  • Alignment in second language dialogue
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 23, No. 4. (June 2008), pp. 528-556.
  • Control mechanisms in bilingual language production: Neural evidence from language switching studies
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 23, No. 4. (June 2008), pp. 557-582.
  • Saying the right word at the right time: Syntagmatic and paradigmatic interference in sentence production
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 23, No. 4. (2008), pp. 583-608.
    by Gary S Dell, Gary M Oppenheim, Audrey K Kittredge
    posted by 1 person briordan
  • The contributions of lexico-semantic and discourse information to the resolution of ambiguous categorical anaphors
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 22, No. 6. (September 2007), pp. 793-827.
  • Fine-grained access to targets and competitors in phonemically identical spoken sequences: the case of French elision
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 22, No. 6. (September 2007), pp. 828-859.
  • Object relatives made easy: A cross-linguistic comparison of the constraints influencing young children's processing of relative clauses
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 22, No. 6. (September 2007), pp. 860-897.
  • Phrasal prosody disambiguates syntax
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 22, No. 6. (September 2007), pp. 898-909.
  • Insertion of discrete phonological units: An articulatory and acoustic investigation of aphasic speech
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 22, No. 6. (September 2007), pp. 910-948.
  • pArchitectures, representations and processes of language production/p
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 7-8. (December 2006), pp. 777-789.
  • pLanguage-specific properties of the lexicon: Implications for learning and processing/p
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 7-8. (December 2006), pp. 790-816.
  • pLimited interaction in speech production: Chronometric, speech error, and neuropsychological evidence/p
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 7-8. (December 2006), pp. 817-855.
  • Are speech error patterns affected by a monitoring bias?
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 7-8. (December 2006), pp. 856-891.
  • pA further look at semantic context effects in language production: The role of response congruency/p
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 7-8. (December 2006), pp. 892-919.
  • pA chatterbox is a box:Morphology in German word production/p
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 7-8. (December 2006), pp. 920-944.
  • Grammatical gender selection and the representation of morphemes: The production of Dutch diminutives
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 7-8. (December 2006), pp. 945-973.
  • pThe role of local and global syntactic structure in language production: Evidence from syntactic priming/p
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 7-8. (December 2006), pp. 974-1010.
  • The functions of structural priming
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 7-8. (December 2006), pp. 1011-1029.
  • The semantics of syntactic frames
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 5. (August 2006), pp. 1-1.
  • Neural correlates of processing syntactic, semantic, and thematic relationships in sentences
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 5. (August 2006), pp. 1-1.
  • From phonological recoding to lexical reading:A longitudinal study on reading developmentin Italian
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 5. (August 2006), pp. 1-1.
  • Grammatical processing in American Sign Language: Age of first-language acquisition effects in relation to syntactic structure
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 5. (August 2006), pp. 1-1.
  • Implicit causality, implicit consequentiality and semantic roles
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 5. (August 2006), pp. 1-1.
  • French and Spanish-speaking children use different visual and motor units during spelling acquisition
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 5. (August 2006), pp. 1-1.
  • Affixal salience and the processing of derivational morphology: The role of suffix allomorphy
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 4. (June 2006), pp. 1-1.
    posted by 1 person mmorita
  • Relative clause attachment in Dutch: On-line comprehension corresponds to corpus frequencies when lexical variables are taken into account
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 4. (June 2006), pp. 1-1.
  • The locus of naming difficulties in children with dyslexia: Evidence of inefficient phonological encoding
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 4. (June 2006), pp. 1-1.
  • Syllables as functional units in a copying task
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 4. (June 2006), pp. 1-1.
  • Word and sentence production across the lifespan
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 1-3. (April 2006), pp. 1-1.
    by Antje Meyer
  • The input-output relationship in first language acquisition
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 1-3. (April 2006), pp. 2-24.
    by Heike Behrens
  • Mapping of prosodic structure onto words and phrases in children's and adults' speech production
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 1-3. (April 2006), pp. 25-47.
    by Lisa Goffman, Lori Heisler, Rahul Chakraborty
  • Speech errors across the lifespan
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 1-3. (April 2006), pp. 48-77.
    by Janet Vousden, Elizabeth Maylor
  • Functional architecture of naming dice, digits, and number words
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 1-3. (April 2006), pp. 78-111.
    by Ardi Roelofs
  • Monitoring metrical stress in polysyllabic words
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 1-3. (April 2006), pp. 112-140.
    by Niels Schiller, Bernadette Jansma, Judith Peters, Willem Levelt
  • The production of pronominal clitics: Implications for theories of lexical access
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 1-3. (April 2006), pp. 141-180.
    by Chiara Finocchiaro, Alfonso Caramazza
  • Language production and working memory: The case of subject-verb agreement
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 1-3. (April 2006), pp. 181-204.
    by Robert Hartsuiker, Pashiera Barkhuysen
  • The scope of advance planning in written picture naming
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 1-3. (April 2006), pp. 205-237.
    by Patrick Bonin, Nathalie Malardier, Alain Meot, Michel Fayol
  • Age-related effects on speech production: A review
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 1-3. (April 2006), pp. 238-290.
    by Linda Mortensen, Antje Meyer, Glyn Humphreys
  • The influence of age on the time course of word preparation in multiword utterances
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 1-3. (April 2006), pp. 291-321.
    by Daniel Spieler, Zenzi Griffin
  • Effects of age, animacy and activation order on sentence production
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 21, No. 1-3. (April 2006), pp. 322-354.
    by Lori Altmann, Susan Kemper
  • How far is near? Inferring distance from spatial descriptions
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 20, No. 5. (October 2005), pp. 617-632.
    by Laura Carlson, Eric Covey
  • Lingering effects of disfluent material on comprehension of garden path sentences
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 20, No. 5. (October 2005), pp. 633-666.
    by Ellen Lau, Fernanda Ferreira
  • Why children and adults sometimes (but not always) compute implicatures
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 20, No. 5. (October 2005), pp. 667-696.
    by Maria T Guasti, Gennaro Chierchia, Stephen Crain, Francesca Foppolo, Andrea Gualmini, Luisa Meroni
  • A werd is not quite a word: On the role of sublexical phonological information in visual lexical decision
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 20, No. 4. (August 2005), pp. 513-552.
    by Heike Martensen, Ton Dijkstra, Eric Maris
  • When zebras become painted donkeys: Grammatical gender and semantic priming interact during picture integration in a spoken Spanish sentence
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 20, No. 4. (August 2005), pp. 553-587.
    by Nicole Wicha, Araceli Orozco-Figueroa, Iliana Reyes, Arturo Hernandez, Gavaldon, Elizabeth Bates
  • From phonological paraphasias to the structure of the phonological output lexicon
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 20, No. 4. (August 2005), pp. 589-616.
    by Michal Biran, Naama Friedmann
  • Thinking for speaking and thinking for listening: The interaction of thought and language in typical and non-fluent comprehension and production
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 20, No. 3. (June 2005), pp. 417-441.
    by Lucy Dipper, Maria Black, Karen Bryan
  • Illusory conjunctions in French: The nature of sublexical units in visual word recognition
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 20, No. 3. (June 2005), pp. 443-464.
    by Nadege Doignon, Daniel Zagar
  • Assimilation in existing and novel German compounds
    Language and Cognitive Processes, Vol. 20, No. 3. (June 2005), pp. 465-488.
    by Heidi Gumnior, Pienie Zwitserlood, Jens Bolte
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