Annapolis, Maryland (USA)
28-30 July, 2008
5th International
Workshop on Language Production

Posters

 

Click on a title to read the Abstract

Poster size: 3 feet high x 4.5 feet wide (about 1m x 1.5 m)

 

POSTER SESSION I (Monday, July 28, 4:30-6:00 pm)

 

 

1. To speak or not to speak – Brain preparation and execution of speech

Christian A. Kell, Benjamin Morillon, Frederique Kouneiher, & Anne-Lise Giraud

 

2. Characterization of electroencephalographic (EEG) components elicited by overt speech production in the picture naming task

Stéphanie Riès, Niels Janssen, Stéphane Dufau, F.-Xavier Alario, & Borís Burle

 

3. Sources of jargonaphasia and levels of speech production

Andrew Olson, Cristina Romani, & Liz Halloran

 

4. The time course of naming new-words associated to abstract drawings

Marina Laganaro, Christian Camen, & Stéphanie Morand

 

5. “Lisa, Patty, Selma, Snowball … Maggie!” Names that parents call their children by mistake

Zenzi M Griffin & Thomas Wangerman

 

6. A day at the races: Production of routinized language

J. Cooper Cutting, Breanne Barnes, & Samantha Walte

 

7. Further investigations into cumulative semantic inhibition in picture naming: Effects of long lag &repeated members of a category

Lyndsey Nickels, David Howard, Helen Dodd, & Max Coltheart

 

8. Cumulative semantic interference: the dark side of repetition priming

Gary M. Oppenheim, Gary S. Dell, & Myrna F. Schwartz

 

9. Simulating aphasia: Effects of frequency and age-of-acquisition on naming to a tempo

Audrey K. Kittredge, Gary S. Dell, & Myrna F. Schwartz

 

10. Compound production in aphasia: individual differences and their sources

Susanne R. Borgwaldt & Arpita Bose

 

11. Quantitative and qualitative changes in neologisms in jargon aphasia

Arpita Bose & Lori Buchanan

 

12. Phonotactic restrictions across the phonological word boundary

Ariel M. Goldberg, Brenda Rapp

 

13. A lexical representation of syllable structure:  Evidence from speech errors across tasks

Cristina Romani, Claudia Galluzzi, & Andrew Olson

 

14. Do lexical frequency effects cascade to articulatory processes? Evidence from speech errors

Melissa Michaud Baese, H. Ross Baker, & Matt Goldrick

 

15. Exploring the interface between phonological encoding and articulation

Susannah Moat, Martin Corley, & Robert J. Hartsuiker

 

16. Self-monitoring in speech: where do we stop our erroneous utterances?

Ilse Tydgat, Rob Hartsuiker, & Martin Pickering

 

17. Self-interruptions and self-repairs in speech production

Joana Cholin, Peter Indefrey, & Manuel Carreiras

 

18. Word learning ability is correlated with phonological working memory improvement after temporal lobe resection

Kyrana Tsapkini, Elvira Masoura, Maria Apostolidou, Vasiliki Siatra, & Nikos Foroglou

 

19. The representation of orthographic consonants: evidence from dysgraphia

Vanessa Costa, Simon Fischer-Baum, Brenda Rapp, & Gabriele Miceli

 

20. The Web as a Psycholinguistic Resource

Austin F. Frank, Celeste Kidd, Matthew Post, Ben Van Durme, & T. Florian Jaeger

 

 

POSTER SESSION II (Tuesday, July 29, 4:30-6:00 pm)

 

21. Attentional requirements for the selection of words from different grammatical categories

Pauline Ayora, Niels Janssen, Roberto Dell’Acqua, & F.-Xavier Alario

 

22. Nouns and Verbs Exhibit Different Word Frequency Effects in Picture Naming

F. Moscoso del Prado Martin, K. Gabris, & F.-X. Alario

 

23. The Grammatical Class Effect in the Picture-Word Interference Paradigm

Niels Janssen, Alissa Melinger, Bradford Mahon, Matthew Finkbeiner, & Alfonso Caramazza

 

24. Structurally primed active and passive sentence production in healthy and agrammatic aphasic speakers: An eyetracking study

Soojin Cho & Cynthia K. Thompson

 

25. Time course for producing adjuncts in normal and agrammatic speech

Jiyeon Lee & Cynthia K. Thompson

 

26. Event-Related fMRI Shows Contralesional Activity Linked to Object and Action Naming Errors in Patients with Chronic Aphasia
Whitney Anne Postman-Caucheteux, Rasmus Birn, Randall Pursley, John Butman, Jeffrey Solomon, Dante Picchioni, Joe McArdle, Jiang Xu, & Allen Braun

 

27. Monotropism within and between Grammatical Encoding and Grammatical Decoding: Implications for the cognitive architecture of human sentence processing

Gerard Kempen

 

28. Morphosyntactic vs. metrical constraints on the formation of mid-level prosodic constituents in American English

Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel & Alice Turk

 

29. The pros and cons of cascading activation in bilingual speech production

Nattalia Paterson & Matt Goldrick

 

30. The time course of word-form encoding in second language word production: An ERP study

Jana Hanulová, Douglas J. Davidson, & Peter Indefrey

 

31. When cat competes with dog but not with perro: Evidence from the semantic competitor paradigm

Yolanda Garcia Castro, Kristof Strijkers, Albert Costa,& Xavier Alario

 

32. Of blue bottles and blue flowers: Phonological representations of L1 are active when producing words in L2

Katharina Spalek & Markus F. Damian

 

33. Language control in bilingual speech production: A blocked naming study

Kristof Strijkers & Albert Costa

 

34. Concreteness effects in word translation

Ansgar Hantsch & Manuel Carreiras

 

35. Determining the form of initial mentions in dialogue

Ellen Gurman Bard, Robin L. Hill, & Mary Ellen Foster

 

36. Is structural priming from erroneous input possible?

Iva Ivanova, Martin Pickering, Janet Mclean, Albert Costa, & Holly Branigan

 

37. What Happens in Perception, Stays in Perception: The Modality Specificity of Phonotactic Learning as Revealed by Speech Errors

Jill A. Warker, Ye Xu, Gary S. Dell, Cynthia Fisher

 

38. Auditory-motor integration during fast repetition: the neuronal correlates of shadowing

Claudia Peschke, Wolfram Ziegler, Juliane Kappes, & Annette Baumgaertner,

 

39. How much imitation is there in repetition?

Juliane Kappes, Annette Baumgaertner,  Claudia Peschke, & Wolfram Ziegler

 

40. Effects of sonority markedness on the perception of onset clusters

Julia Yarmolinskaya & Brenda Rapp

 

41. When Hands Convey the Concreteness of Words: Language Production in Cued Speech

Eva Smolka, Alberto Aviles, & Manuel Carreiras