All Stories

  1. Examining bilingual language switching across the lifespan in cued and voluntary switching contexts.
  2. MultiPic: A new valuable tool for cognitive scientists
  3. The consequences of literacy and schooling for parsing strings
  4. Reading comprehension and immersion schooling: evidence from component skills
  5. The Spanish General Knowledge Norms
  6. Not Everybody Sees the Ness in the Darkness: Individual Differences in Masked Suffix Priming
  7. Does bilingualism shape inhibitory control in the elderly?
  8. Testing Bilingual Educational Methods: A Plea to End the Language-Mixing Taboo
  9. Does learning a language in the elderly enhance switching ability?
  10. Emergent Bilingualism and Working Memory Development in School Aged Children
  11. Consonantal overlap effects in a perceptual matching task
  12. The emotional impact of being myself: Emotions and foreign-language processing.
  13. “Hazy” or “jumbled”? Putting together the pieces of the bilingual puzzle
  14. The Electrophysiology of the Bilingual Brain
  15. The bilingual advantage: Acta est fabula?
  16. Digging into the bilingual brain in the elderly
  17. Universal brain signature of proficient reading: Evidence from four contrasting languages
  18. How do bilinguals identify the language of the words they read?
  19. Developmental changes associated with cross-language similarity in bilingual children
  20. The neuroanatomy of bilingualism: how to turn a hazy view into the full picture
  21. Numbers are not like words: Different pathways for literacy and numeracy
  22. Differential oscillatory encoding of foreign speech
  23. Lexical organization of language-ambiguous and language-specific words in bilinguals
  24. Mixing Languages during Learning? Testing the One Subject—One Language Rule
  25. The Impact of Literacy on Position Uncertainty
  26. Combinatorial semantics strengthens angular-anterior temporal coupling
  27. Lying in a native and foreign language
  28. The Inhibitory Advantage in Bilingual Children Revisited
  29. Orthographic Coding: Brain Activation for Letters, Symbols, and Digits
  30. Orthographic Coding in Illiterates and Literates
  31. Revisiting letter transpositions within and across morphemic boundaries
  32. Word Translation Processes Across Childhood and Adolescence
  33. The role of form in morphological priming: Evidence from bilinguals
  34. Evidence for Letter-Specific Position Coding Mechanisms
  35. The Influence of Reading Expertise in Mirror-Letter Perception: Evidence From Beginning and Expert Readers
  36. The wide-open doors to lexical access
  37. Differential Sensitivity of Letters, Numbers, and Symbols to Character Transpositions
  38. Reading Words and Sentences in Spanish
  39. Early morphological decomposition of suffixed words: Masked priming evidence with transposed-letter nonword primes
  40. Semantic combinatorial processing of non-anomalous expressions
  41. Smart Phone, Smart Science: How the Use of Smartphones Can Revolutionize Research in Cognitive Science
  42. Fast morphological effects in first and second language word recognition
  43. Is morpho-orthographic decomposition purely orthographic? Evidence from masked priming in the same–different task
  44. Transliteration and transcription effects in biscriptal readers: The case of Greeklish
  45. Phonology by itself: Masked phonological priming effects with and without orthographic overlap
  46. Through the looking-glass: Mirror reading
  47. On Coding Non-Contiguous Letter Combinations
  48. Two Words, One Meaning: Evidence of Automatic Co-Activation of Translation Equivalents
  49. The relative position priming effect depends on whether letters are vowels or consonants.
  50. Masked translation priming effects with low proficient bilinguals
  51. Electrophysiological correlates of the masked translation priming effect with highly proficient simultaneous bilinguals
  52. Masked Translation Priming Effects With Highly Proficient Simultaneous Bilinguals
  53. Influence of prime lexicality, frequency, and pronounceability on the masked onset priming effect
  54. Orthographic and associative neighborhood density effects: What is shared, what is different?
  55. Subject relative clauses are not universally easier to process: Evidence from Basque
  56. From numbers to letters: Feedback regularization in visual word recognition
  57. SYLLABARIUM: An online application for deriving complete statistics for Basque and Spanish orthographic syllables
  58. Subtitle-Based Word Frequencies as the Best Estimate of Reading Behavior: The Case of Greek
  59. Does the brain regularize digits and letters to the same extent?
  60. There is noclamwithcoatsin thecalm coast: Delimiting the transposed-letter priming effect
  61. Eye movements when reading words with $YMβOL$ and NUM83R5: There is a cost
  62. IsMilkmana superhero likeBatman? Constituent morphological priming in compound words
  63. A standardized set of 260 pictures for Modern Greek: Norms for name agreement, age of acquisition, and visual complexity
  64. N250 effects for letter transpositions depend on lexicality: ‘casual’ or ‘causal’?
  65. Constituent priming effects: Evidence for preserved morphological processing in healthy old readers
  66. Qualitative differences in the representation of abstract versus concrete words: Evidence from the visual-world paradigm
  67. ERP correlates of inhibitory and facilitative effects of constituent frequency in compound word reading
  68. Associative and orthographic neighborhood density effects in normal aging and Alzheimer’s disease.
  69. Arecoffeeandtoffeeserved in acup? Ortho-phonologically mediated associative priming
  70. NoA’s ark: Influence of the number of associates in visual word recognition
  71. Doesdarknesslead tohappiness? Masked suffix priming effects
  72. Masked associative/semantic priming effects across languages with highly proficient bilinguals
  73. Children Like Dense Neighborhoods: Orthographic Neighborhood Density Effects in Novel Readers
  74. Transposed-Letter Priming Effects for Close Versus Distant Transpositions
  75. R34D1NG W0RD5 W1TH NUMB3R5.
  76. Do transposed-letter similarity effects occur at a morpheme level? Evidence for morpho-orthographic decomposition
  77. The role of the frequency of constituents in compound words: Evidence from Basque and Spanish
  78. READING WORDS, NUMB3R5 and $YMßOL$
  79. Influencia de la frecuencia de las letras en el efecto de facilitación por transposición de letras Letter frequency in transposed-letter similarity effects
  80. Letter Position Encoding and Morphology
  81. Do transposed-letter similarity effects occur at a morpheme level? Evidence for ortho-morphological decomposition
  82. Masked associative/semantic and identity priming across languages with highly proficient bilinguals
  83. Does Literacy Change Face Recognition?
  84. How does literacy shape letter processing?
  85. Do Handedness and Language Dominance Work Hand-in-Hand?
  86. Semantic combinatorial processing of low-typical aexpressions
  87. Masked Language-Switching Priming Effects in Trilingual Readers
  88. Does L2 proficiency modulate noncognate masked translation-priming effects?
  89. Differential Processing of Consonants and Vowels in the Relative Position Priming Effect
  90. Automatic transliteration effects in biscriptal readers: The case of Greeklish
  91. Challenging feedback mechanisms from lexico-semantics to orthography
  92. ERP Correlates of Inhibitory and Facilitative Effects of Compounds Constituent Frequency
  93. Associative Priming of Concrete and Abstract Words: Electrophysiological Evidence for Distinct Context Effects
  94. Electrophysiological correlates of masked orthographic priming with high- and low-frequency orthographic neighbors
  95. How Does Reading Experience Shape Letter Processing? Behavioral and Electrophysiological Evidence
  96. Transpositions within letter, number, and symbol strings: Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence
  97. Multilingual vs. Monolingual Concept Acquisition: Which Is Stronger?
  98. Consonants and Vowels in Visual Word Recognition: An MEG Study
  99. Psycholinguistic Forecast of Nonnative Language Comprehension Achievement
  100. From Visual Encoding To Meaning: Processing Numbers, Letters and Pictures
  101. Cross-Language Effects in a Picture-Word Matching Task: An ERP Investigation
  102. Transposed-letter effects depend on the lexicality of the primes: Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence