All Stories

  1. People can change how they use perceptual memory to understand speech on the fly
  2. Comparing accounts of formant normalization against US English listeners' vowel perception
  3. Maintenance of subcategorical information during speech perception: revisiting misunderstood limitations
  4. Erratum: Dynamic re-weighting of acoustic and contextual cues in spoken word recognition [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 146(2), EL135–EL140 (2019)]
  5. What we do (not) know about the mechanisms underlying adaptive speech perception: A computational framework and review
  6. Using Rational Models to Interpret the Results of Experiments on Accent Adaptation
  7. Cross-talker generalization in the perception of nonnative speech: A large-scale replication.
  8. A Rational Model of Incremental Argument Interpretation: The Comprehension of Swedish Transitive Clauses
  9. Xie, Liu, & Jaeger (2020). Cross-talker generalization during foreign-accented speech perception
  10. Expectation adaptation during natural reading
  11. Comparing non-native and native speech: Are L2 productions more variable?
  12. Production efficiency can cause grammatical change: Learners deviate from the input to better balance efficiency against robust message transmission
  13. Big data suggest strong constraints of linguistic similarity on adult language learning
  14. Talker-specific pronunciation or speech error? Discounting (or not) atypical pronunciations during speech perception.
  15. Dynamic re-weighting of acoustic and contextual cues in spoken word recognition
  16. Changing expectations mediate adaptation in L2 production
  17. Strong and weak phonological patterns: How the transmission of meaning shapes phonology
  18. (Early) context effects on event-related potentials over natural inputs
  19. YanFarmerJaeger_EyeTrackingAdaptation
  20. Maintaining information about speech input during accent adaptation
  21. Inferring causes during speech perception
  22. Rapid adaptation to foreign-accented speech and its transfer to an unfamiliar talker
  23. Sociolinguistic Perception as Inference Under Uncertainty
  24. Nasal place assimilation trades off inferrability of both target and trigger words
  25. Human Information Processing Shapes Language Change
  26. Prediction (or not) during language processing. A commentary on Nieuwland et al. (2017) and DeLong et al. (2005)
  27. Satellite- vs. Verb-Framing Underpredicts Nonverbal Motion Categorization: Insights from a Large Language Sample and Simulations
  28. Corrigendum: What the Heck Is Salience? How Predictive Language Processing Contributes to Sociolinguistic Perception
  29. Incremental implicit learning of bundles of statistical patterns
  30. Readers generalize adaptation to newly-encountered dialectal structures to other unfamiliar structures
  31. The role of verb repetition in cumulative structural priming in comprehension.
  32. What the Heck Is Salience? How Predictive Language Processing Contributes to Sociolinguistic Perception
  33. Dynamically adapted context-specific hyper-articulation: Feedback from interlocutors affects speakers’ subsequent pronunciations
  34. Talker-specificity and adaptation in quantifier interpretation
  35. Learning Additional Languages as Hierarchical Probabilistic Inference: Insights From First Language Processing
  36. Balancing Effort and Information Transmission During Language Acquisition: Evidence From Word Order and Case Marking
  37. Dynamic hyperarticulation of coda voicing contrasts
  38. Now or … later: Perceptual data arenotimmediately forgotten during language processing
  39. The (in)dependence of articulation and lexical planning during isolated word production
  40. What do we mean by prediction in language comprehension?
  41. Cross-linguistic psycholinguistics and its critical role in theory development: early beginnings and recent advances
  42. Re-examining selective adaptation: Fatiguing feature detectors, or distributional learning?
  43. Uncertainty and Expectation in Sentence Processing: Evidence From Subcategorization Distributions
  44. Robust speech perception: Recognize the familiar, generalize to the similar, and adapt to the novel.
  45. Predicting head-marking variability in Yucatec Maya relative clause production
  46. Socially-mediated syntactic alignment
  47. Rapid Expectation Adaptation during Syntactic Comprehension
  48. Introduction to the Special Issue: Parsimony and Redundancy in Models of Language
  49. “Well, that's one way”: Interactivity in parsing and production
  50. Seeking predictions from a predictive framework
  51. Alignment as a consequence of expectation adaptation: Syntactic priming is affected by the prime’s prediction error given both prior and recent experience
  52. Evidence for Implicit Learning in Syntactic Comprehension
  53. Production preferences cannot be understood without reference to communication
  54. The source ambiguity problem: Distinguishing the effects of grammar and processing on acceptability judgments
  55. Language learners restructure their input to facilitate efficient communication
  56. Cue Effectiveness in Communicatively Efficient Discourse Production
  57. Comment on “Phonemic Diversity Supports a Serial Founder Effect Model of Language Expansion from Africa”
  58. Incremental Phonological Encoding during Unscripted Sentence Production
  59. Phonological overlap affects lexical selection during sentence production.
  60. Learning to Represent a Multi-Context Environment: More than Detecting Changes
  61. Complementing quantitative typology with behavioral approaches: Evidence for typological universals
  62. Greenbergian universals, diachrony, and statistical analyses
  63. Mixed effect models for genetic and areal dependencies in linguistic typology
  64. On language ‘utility’: processing complexity and communicative efficiency
  65. Redundancy and reduction: Speakers manage syntactic information density
  66. The Cross‐linguistic Study of Sentence Production
  67. Categorical data analysis: Away from ANOVAs (transformation or not) and towards logit mixed models
  68. Topics First! In- and outside of Bulgarian wh-interrogatives