All Stories

  1. Processing Mandarin Chinese classifiers as a lexico-syntactic feature during noun phrase production
  2. The role of semantic features in word production
  3. Variation in gender assignment strategies in mixed Spanish–Chinese noun phrases: Insights from a multilingual community in Barcelona
  4. Semantic Processing During Spoken Word Production by Children with Cochlear Implants
  5. Distinct connectivity patterns in clusters of inferior parietal cortex: from a cognitive control hub to modulating cortical areas
  6. Grammatical gender in Slovak word production: an event-related potential study
  7. Activation of classifiers in word production: insights from lexico-syntactic probability distributions
  8. The effect of proficiency on phonological encoding in L2 speech production
  9. Processing of visual shape information in Chinese classifier-noun phrases
  10. Neuro-cognitive correlates of lexical borrowing during sentence comprehension of bi-dialectal speakers
  11. Processing syntactic violations in the non-native language: different behavioural and neural correlates as a function of typological similarity? – ERRATUM
  12. Correction: Language aptitude is related to the anatomy of the transverse temporal gyri
  13. Processing syntactic violations in the non-native language: different behavioural and neural correlates as a function of typological similarity?
  14. Language aptitude is related to the anatomy of the transverse temporal gyri
  15. Word and morpheme frequency effects in naming Mandarin Chinese compounds: More than a replication
  16. Morphological encoding in language production: Electrophysiological evidence from Mandarin Chinese compound words
  17. The role of animacy in language production: evidence from bare noun naming
  18. Information structure in Makhuwa: Electrophysiological evidence for a universal processing account
  19. Recognizing two dialects in one written form: A Stroop study
  20. Chapter 1. Models of language production and the temporal organization of lexical access
  21. Cross-linguistic differences in gender congruency effects: Evidence from meta-analyses
  22. Connectivity Profile of Middle Inferior Parietal Cortex Confirms the Hypothesis About Modulating Cortical Areas
  23. Gender Congruency Effects in Spanish: Behavioral Evidence from Noun Phrase Production
  24. Distinct connectivity patterns in clusters of inferior parietal cortex
  25. Editorial: From individual minds to language co-evolution: Psychological mechanisms for the evolution of cross-cultural and cross-species communication systems
  26. Mapping caudal inferior parietal cortex supports the hypothesis about a modulating cortical area
  27. Connectivity profile of middle inferior parietal cortex confirms modulating cortical areas as a new brain category
  28. When left is right: The role of typological similarity in multilinguals’ inhibitory control performance
  29. Orthography influences spoken word production in blocked cyclic naming
  30. Mapping caudal inferior parietal cortex supports the hypothesis about a modulating cortical area
  31. Mapping caudal inferior parietal cortex supports the hypothesis about a modulating cortical area
  32. Cross-Linguistic Differences in Utterance Planning: Evidence from Meta-Analyses
  33. Noun-phrase production as a window to language selection: An ERP study
  34. Cross-linguistic interference in late language learners: An ERP study
  35. Cross-Dialectal Novel Word Learning and Borrowing
  36. Number in the Mental Lexicon
  37. Adjective-noun order in Papiamento-Dutch code-switching
  38. Classifiers in Mandarin Chinese: Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence regarding their representation and processing
  39. Context Matters for Tone and Intonation Processing in Mandarin
  40. Dual Function of Primary Somatosensory Cortex in Cognitive Control of Language: Evidence from Resting State fMRI
  41. (Not so) Great Expectations: Listening to Foreign-Accented Speech Reduces the Brain’s Anticipatory Processes
  42. The time course of speech production revisited: no early orthographic effect, even in Mandarin Chinese
  43. Neurolinguistic Approaches in Morphology
  44. Tonal mapping of Xi'an Mandarin and Standard Chinese
  45. Cognitive demand modulates connectivity patterns of rostral inferior parietal cortex in cognitive control of language
  46. Adjective-noun order in Papiamento-Dutch code-switching
  47. Evidence for syntactic feature transfer between two languages
  48. High amyloid burden is associated with fewer specific words during spontaneous speech in individuals with subjective cognitive decline
  49. The Oxford Handbook of Neurolinguistics
  50. A Review on Grammatical Gender Agreement in Speech Production
  51. Towards a neural model of infant cry perception
  52. Morphological Theory and Neurolinguistics
  53. Cochlear implant users' speech is not more deviant in spectral than in time dimension
  54. Dynamic effect of tonal similarity in bilingual auditory lexical processing
  55. Prosody perception and production by children with cochlear implants
  56. Editorial: (Pushing) the Limits of Neuroplasticity Induced by Adult Language Acquisition
  57. Plural dominance and the production of determiner-noun phrases in French
  58. Lexico-syntactic features are activated but not selected in bare noun production: Electrophysiological evidence from overt picture naming
  59. When is a question with a statement word order identified in standard Persian?
  60. How native speakers of Persian make use of prosodic cues to disambiguate statements from questions.
  61. Connectivity of two brain regions when learning a new grammar
  62. A modelling procedure to retrieve tonal patterns in a Chinese dialect
  63. Neural oscillatory mechanisms during novel grammar learning underlying language analytical abilities
  64. When speaker identity is unavoidable: Neural processing of speaker identity cues in natural speech
  65. Cognitive components of spoken word production when naming pictures
  66. The role of F0 and duration in the identification of wh-in-situ questions in Persian
  67. The Role of Prosody in the Identification of Persian Sentence Types: Declarative or Wh-question?
  68. The perisylvian language network and language analytical abilities
  69. The perception of emotion and focus prosody with varying acoustic cues in cochlear implant simulations with varying filter slopes
  70. Brain strategies on grammar learning
  71. Does a bilingual activate both languages or only the relevant language during speech production?
  72. Whole-brain functional connectivity during acquisition of novel grammar: Distinct functional networks depend on language learning abilities
  73. Formant Frequencies and Vowel Space Area in Javanese and Sundanese English Language Learners
  74. Solving the problem of double negation is not impossible: electrophysiological evidence for the cohesive function of sentential negation
  75. Online processing of tone and intonation in Mandarin: Evidence from ERPs
  76. Possible neural oscillatory mechanisms underlying learning
  77. Context effects on tone and intonation processing in Mandarin
  78. Interlingual two-to-one mapping of tonal categories
  79. Predicting tonal realizations in one Chinese dialect from another
  80. Distinct morphological processing of recently learned compound words: An ERP study
  81. The production of singular- and plural-dominant nouns in Dutch
  82. Morphological priming during language switching: an ERP study
  83. Above and Beyond the Segments
  84. Dual activation of word stress from orthography
  85. Neural correlates reveal sub-lexical orthography and phonology during reading aloud: a review
  86. Constructing initial phonology in Mandarin Chinese: Syllabic or subsyllabic? A masked priming investigation
  87. Accessing Words from the Mental Lexicon
  88. Multi-level processing of phonetic variants in speech production and visual word processing: evidence from Mandarin lexical tones
  89. The effect of spectral smearing on the identification of pureF0intonation contours in vocoder simulations of cochlear implants
  90. Maternal mindfulness and anxiety during pregnancy affect infants’ neural responses to sounds
  91. Second language phonology influences first language word naming
  92. Tonal variability in lexical access
  93. The nature of hemispheric specialization for prosody perception
  94. The lexical-syntactic representation of number
  95. Phonetic accounts of timed responses in syllable monitoring experiments
  96. Plural as a value of Cushitic gender: Evidence from gender congruency effect experiments in Konso (Cushitic)
  97. The Multiple Pronunciations of Japanese Kanji: A Masked Priming Investigation
  98. Trial by trial: selecting first or second language phonology of a visually masked word
  99. Blunted feelings: Alexithymia is associated with a diminished neural response to speech prosody
  100. The effect of removing linguistic information upon identifying speakers of a foreign language
  101. Different influences of the native language of a listener on speaker recognition
  102. The Proximate Phonological Unit of Chinese-English Bilinguals: Proficiency Matters
  103. Evaluation of a foreign speaker in forensic phonetics: a report
  104. L2 word stress representation: Investigating cognate words and the role of orthography on phonological processing
  105. The role of orthography and phonology in English: An ERP study on first and second language reading aloud
  106. Hearing feelings: A quantitative meta-analysis on the neuroimaging literature of emotional prosody perception
  107. The selection of closed-class elements during language production: a reassessment of the evidence and a new look on new data
  108. Morphological priming survives a language switch
  109. The Nature of Affective Priming in Music and Speech
  110. Reading aloud in Persian: ERP evidence for an early locus of the masked onset priming effect
  111. Electrophysiological correlates of automatic spreading of activation in patients with psychotic disorder and first-degree relatives
  112. Orthographic and phonological facilitation in speech production: New evidence from picture naming in Chinese
  113. Independent Distractor Frequency and Age-of-Acquisition Effects in Picture–Word Interference: fMRI Evidence for Post-lexical and Lexical Accounts according to Distractor Type
  114. Encoding, Decoding, and Acquisition
  115. The nature of hemispheric specialization for linguistic and emotional prosodic perception: A meta-analysis of the lesion literature
  116. Homophonic Context Effects when Naming Japanese Kanji: Evidence for Processing Costs?
  117. Speaking of Which: Dissecting the Neurocognitive Network of Language Production in Picture Naming
  118. The Sensory Consequences of Speaking: Parametric Neural Cancellation during Speech in Auditory Cortex
  119. The functional neuroanatomy of morphology in language production
  120. When leaf becomes neuter
  121. The Use of Electroencephalography in Language Production Research: A Review
  122. The functional unit of Japanese word naming: Evidence from masked priming.
  123. Semantic context effects when naming Japanese kanji, but not Chinese hànzì
  124. Detection of speech errors in the speech of others: An ERP study
  125. Second-language phonology is active when using your first language
  126. The temporal characteristics of functional activation in Broca's area during overt picture naming
  127. Speaking one's second language under time pressure: An ERP study on verbal self-monitoring in German-Dutch bilinguals
  128. The determiner congruency effect in language production investigated with functional MRI
  129. Event-related brain potentials during the monitoring of speech errors
  130. Morphological priming in overt language production: Electrophysiological evidence from Dutch
  131. Situating language production within the matrix of human cognition: The state of the art in language production research
  132. Brain Error–monitoring Activity is Affected by Semantic Relatedness: An Event-related Brain Potentials Study
  133. The Syllable in Speech Production
  134. The masked onset priming effect in picture naming
  135. Motivation and semantic context affect brain error-monitoring activity: An event-related brain potentials study
  136. Words, pauses, and gestures: New directions in language production research
  137. Phonology and orthography in reading aloud
  138. Bilingual language control: An event-related brain potential study
  139. The ability of expert witnesses to identify voices: a comparison between trained and untrained listerners
  140. The Onset of the Onset Effect in Reading Aloud
  141. Stress and Semantic Context Affect Brain Error-Monitoring Activity
  142. Type of Letter Effects in Reading Aloud: The Case of Vowels Versus Consonants
  143. Neural correlates of verbal feedback processing: An fMRI study employing overt speech
  144. Effects of time pressure on verbal self-monitoring: An ERP study
  145. Grammatical gender selection and the representation of morphemes: The production of Dutch diminutives
  146. The role of local and global syntactic structure in language production: Evidence from syntactic priming
  147. Lexical stress encoding in single word production estimated by event-related brain potentials
  148. Activation of segments, not syllables, during phonological encoding in speech production
  149. The influence of semantic category membership on syntactic decisions: A study using event-related brain potentials
  150. A case of normal word reading but impaired letter naming
  151. Effects of syllable frequency in speech production
  152. Monitoring metrical stress in polysyllabic words
  153. Different selection principles of freestanding and bound morphemes in language production.
  154. Phonetics and Phonology in Language Comprehension and Production: Differences and Similarities
  155. Dissociating neural correlates for nouns and verbs
  156. Graphemic complexity and multiple print-to-sound associations in visual word recognition
  157. Monitoring syllable boundaries during speech production
  158. Form-priming effects in nonword naming
  159. Stress priming in picture naming: An SOA study
  160. The word frequency effect in picture naming: Contrasting two hypotheses using homonym pictures
  161. Semantic gender assignment regularities in German
  162. The onset effect in word naming
  163. Some notes on priming, alignment, and self-monitoring
  164. The preparation of syllables in speech production
  165. Phonetics and Phonology in Language Comprehension and Production
  166. The influence of semantic and phonological factors on syntactic decisions: An event-related brain potential study
  167. Tracking the time course of phonological encoding in speech production: an event-related brain potential study
  168. The role of phonological and orthographic information in lexical selection
  169. Grammatical feature selection in noun phrase production: Evidence from German and Dutch
  170. Langages du cerveau
  171. Laboratory Phonology 7
  172. The Selection of Grammatical Features in Word Production: The Case of Plural Nouns in German
  173. Serial order effects in spelling errors: evidence from two dysgraphic patients
  174. Metrical encoding during speech production
  175. Serial Order Effects in Spelling Errors: Evidence from Two Dysgraphic Patients
  176. Serial Order Effects in Spelling Errors: Evidence from Two Dysgraphic Patients
  177. The Acquisition of Syllable Types
  178. Single word production in English: The role of subsyllabic units during phonological encoding.
  179. Single word production in English: The role of subsyllabic units during phonological encoding.
  180. A Developmental Grammar for Syllable Structure in the Production of Child Language
  181. Masked Syllable Priming of English Nouns
  182. No role for syllables in English speech production
  183. The Effect of Visually Masked Syllable Primes on the Naming Latencies of Words and Pictures
  184. Is the syllable frame stored?
  185. The correlation between auditory speech sensitivity and speaker recognition ability
  186. The ability of expert witnesses to identify voices: a comparison between trained and untrained listeners
  187. The effect of masked syllable primes on word and picture naming
  188. Does syllable frequency affect production time in a delayed naming task?
  189. The Syllabic Structure of Spoken Words: Evidence from the Syllabification of Intervocalic Consonants
  190. A comparison of lexeme and speech syllables in Dutch
  191. Introduction to the relation between speech comprehension and production
  192. Psycholinguistic approaches to the investigation of grammatical gender
  193. Phonological encoding of single words: In search of the lost syllable
  194. Frontmatter