All Stories

  1. Structure and usage do not explain each other: an analysis of German word-initial clusters
  2. Introduction: How to conceptualize similarities between language and music
  3. Rhythmic structure – parallels between language and music
  4. Kontrastive Silbenphonologie – Lernersprache Deutsch mit Arabisch als Erstsprache
  5. Default stress assignment in Russian: evidence from acquired surface dyslexia
  6. Variation and its determinants: A corpus-based study of German schwa in the letters of Goethe
  7. Phonotactic principles and exposure in second language processing
  8. The word in phonology: questions and answers
  9. Empirical Approaches to the Phonological Structure of Words
  10. Where Is the Beat? The Neural Correlates of Lexical Stress and Rhythmical Well-formedness in Auditory Story Comprehension
  11. Structural Principles or Frequency of Use? An ERP Experiment on the Learnability of Consonant Clusters
  12. Predicting "When" in Discourse Engages the Human Dorsal Auditory Stream: An fMRI Study Using Naturalistic Stories
  13. Prosodic Parallelism—Comparing Spoken and Written Language
  14. The role of phonotactic principles in language processing
  15. Editorial: Phonological and Phonetic Competence: Between Grammar, Signal Processing, and Neural Activity
  16. Processing of false belief passages during natural story comprehension: An fMRI study
  17. How information structure influences the processing of rhythmic irregularities: ERP evidence from German phrases
  18. Rhythm is in the mind of the beholder. Remarks on the nature of linguistic rhythm
  19. Preferences and variation in word-initial phonotactics: A multi-dimensional evaluation of German and Polish
  20. Prosodic parallelism explaining morphophonological variation in German
  21. Erratum to “The relevance of rhythmical alternation in language processing: An ERP study on English compounds” [Brain Lang. (136) (2014) 19–30]
  22. The role of predictability and structure in word stress processing: an ERP study on Cairene Arabic and a cross-linguistic comparison
  23. The relevance of rhythmical alternation in language processing: An ERP study on English compounds
  24. The lexical representation of word stress in Russian
  25. The Linguistic Categories of Regular and Irregular Verb Inflection in German
  26. Processing (un-)predictable word stress: ERP evidence from Turkish
  27. The influence of rhythmic (ir)regularities on speech processing: Evidence from an ERP study on German phrases
  28. Where the Mass Counts: Common Cortical Activation for Different Kinds of Nonsingularity
  29. Stress “deafness” in a Language with Fixed Word Stress: An ERP Study on Polish
  30. Effects of ketamine-induced psychopathological symptoms on continuous overt rhyme fluency
  31. Resistance to complexity interacting with visual shape—German and Korean orthography
  32. Event-related Potentials Reflecting the Processing of Phonological Constraint Violations
  33. The grammar and typology of plural noun inflection in varieties of German
  34. A Two-Level Approach to Morphological Structure
  35. The processing of German word stress: evidence for the prosodic hierarchy
  36. The role of the posterior superior temporal sulcus in the processing of unmarked transitivity
  37. Electrophysiological responses to violations of morphosyntactic and prosodic features in derived German nouns
  38. Linguistic prominence and Broca's area: The influence of animacy as a linearization principle
  39. How to optimize orthography
  40. An ERP-study of German ‘irregular’ morphology
  41. The emergence of the unmarked: A new perspective on the language-specific function of Broca's area
  42. Linear order and its place in grammar
  43. The structure of the German vocabulary: edge marking of categories and functional considerations
  44. On default rules and other rules
  45. Phonology and Morphology of the Germanic Languages
  46. Phonological versus morphological rules: on German Umlaut and Ablaut
  47. Compounding and inflection in German child language
  48. Zero morphology and constraint interaction: subtraction and epenthesis in German dialects
  49. German Inflection: The Exception That Proves the Rule
  50. Prosodic phonology and its role in the processing of written language
  51. Was ist extrasilbisch im Deutschen und warum?
  52. Review of Pierrehumbert & Beckman (1988): Japanese tone structure
  53. Towards a unification-based phonology
  54. EIN NICHT-LINEARES MODELL DER GRAPHEM-PHONEM-KORRESPONDENZ
  55. Über die Interaktion von Morphologie und Phonologie – Reduplikation im Deutschen
  56. Psycholinguistik der Sprachproduktion
  57. Silbische und lexikalische Phonologie
  58. Phonologie und Morphologie des Umlauts im Deutschen
  59. Schwa and the structure of words in German
  60. The role of phonology in speech processing
  61. The Use of Time in Storytelling
  62. The phonology of /r/
  63. Schrift und die Modularität der Grammatik
  64. Underspecifícation and the description of Chinese vowels
  65. Textverarbeitung und Fremdsprachenerwerb
  66. The structure of the German root
  67. A model of conversion in German
  68. 3. Die Rolle der Silbe in der Lautsprache