Friday, April 1, 2005 Poster Session B

B-01

Control as A-movement: Evidence from the processing of forward and backward control in Korean

Nayoung Kwon, Maria Polinsky, & Robert Kluender

B-02

Predicting subjects' argument structure preferences: A matter of adequate corpus data

Sandra Pappert, Johannes Schliesser, Dirk P. Janssen, & Thomas Pechmann

B-03

Withdrawn

B-04

The integration of multiple sources of information in auditory sentence processing

Hee-Sun Kim

B-05

When the verb arrives late to the party: Referential, lexical and prosodic effects on Korean parsing

Youngon Choi, John C. Trueswell, Kwangil Choi, & Youngjin Kim

B-06

Online effects of NP types on sentence complexity: Eye tracking evidence on English and Korean

Yoonhyoung Lee, Marcus Johnson, Peter C. Gordon, & Randall Hendrick

B-07

Japanese and Korean speakers' errors and corrections during sentence comprehension: Evidence from eye-movement monitoring in a picture selection task

Reiko Mazuka, Gary Feng, Youngon Choi, & Li Yi

B-08

The processing of noun phrase number agreement: evidence from 15 and 18 month old infants

Ana C. Gouvea & John J. Kim

B-09

Verbal mood selection and the resolution of syntactic ambiguities in Spanish

Josep Demestre & José E. García-Albea

B-10

Rich agreement cues argument structure in on-line processing of Basque

Leticia Pablos & Colin Phillips

B-11

Cause for optimism or cause for pessimism? Processing valence tendencies in online sentence comprehension

Luca Onnis & Thomas Farmer

B-12

Sensitivity comes from age and experience: Age and span effects on the ability to utilize contextual information

Thomas A. Farmer, Karen A. Kemtes, & Morten H. Christiansen

B-13

 Withdrawn

B-14

Discourse context can completely overrule lexical-semantic violations: Evidence from the N400

Mante S. Nieuwland & Jos J. A. van Berkum

B-15

Testing the limits of the semantic illusion phenomenon: ERPs reveal temporary change deafness in discourse comprehension

Mante S. Nieuwland & Jos J. A. van Berkum

B-16

Frequency-based competition accounts can't explain garden-path strength

Markus Bader, Jana Häussler, & Josef Bayer

B-17

Lexical category ambiguity in head-final sentences

Markus Bader, Tanja Schmid, & Josef Bayer

B-18

Coordination ambiguities in the visual world paradigm

P. E. Engelhardt, K. G. D. Bailey, & F. Ferreira

B-19

German word order and expectation-based syntactic processing

Roger Levy

B-20

Thematic revision before the verb?

Christoph Scheepers

B-21

Discourse, syntax, and prosody: Event related potentials reveal an immediate interaction

R. Kerkhofs, W. Vonk, H. J. Schriefers, & D. J. Chwilla

B-22

How multiple prosodic boundaries work

Katy Carlson, Charles Clifton, Jr., & Lyn Frazier

B-23

Poster withdrawn

B-24

On the relation between prosodic structure and syntactic decisions in spoken sentence comprehension and production

Celia Teira & Jose M. Igoa

B-25

Effects of transitional probabilities on reading

Jason Barker, Christine Guerrera, & Janet Nicol

B-26

DP internal structure and the visual world context—when syntax meets pragmatics

Ming Xiang, Paul Engelhardt, Anne-Elizabeth True Woodruff, & Fernanda Ferreira

B-27

What's next? Sufficiency of subject-object plausibility for anticipatory eye movements

Alissa Melinger & Andrea Weber

B-28

Subcategorization possibilities trigger syntactic expectations: Evidence from the processing of heavy NP shift

Adrian Staub, Charles Clifton, Jr., & Lyn Frazier

B-29

Disfluency in dialogue: the speaker's problem

Hannele B. M. Nicholson, Ellen Gurman Bard, Anne H. Anderson, Yiya Chen, & Catriona Havard

B-30

The non-arbitrary distribution of disfluency in spoken English has consequences for the listener

Martin Corley, Lucy MacGregor, Michael Schnadt, & David Donaldson

B-31

Flexibility, simultaneity, and exchange errors in sentence production

Eric S. Solomon & Neal J. Pearlmutter

B-32

Relative contributions of feedback and editing in language production: Evidence from the SLIP paradigm

Corey T. McMillan, Martin Corley, & Robert J. Hartsuiker

B-33

Whose picture? Reference resolution in and out of picture NPs

Elsi Kaiser, Jeffrey T. Runner, Rachel S. Sussman, & Michael K. Tanenhaus

B-34

Withdrawn

B-35

Grammatical role and position parallelism in pronoun resolution: A visual-world eye-tracking study

Juhani Järvikivi, Roger van Gompel, Jukka Hyönä, & Raymond Bertram

B-36

Making inferences and resolving anaphors: Use of information structure and gender stereotype information

Pirita Pyykkönen, Jukka Hyönä, & Roger van Gompel

B-37

Towards a quantitative corpus-based evaluation measure for syntactic theories

Franklin Chang, Elena Lieven, & Michael Tomasello

B-38

Toward zero-parameter predictions of reading times: A new computational theory of sentence comprehension as skilled working memory retrieval

Richard L. Lewis & Shravan Vasishth

B-39

A hypothesis about serial order information in parsing (that yields a novel explanation of center-embedding difficulty)

Richard L. Lewis & Shravan Vasishth

B-40

Sentential load and lexical semantic processing: text-change studies

Alison J. S. Sanford & Anthony J. Sanford

B-41

The effect of telicity on eye movements during reading

Erin L. O'Bryan, Benjamin C. Jones, & Jason Barker

B-42

Passives are not always harder: on the interaction of syntactic structure and thematic fit

Inbal Arnon, Martin Pickering, & Holly Branigan

B-43

Verb type and syntactic ambiguity resolution: an ERP study

Andrea E. Martin, Charles E. Clifton, Jr., Neil Stillings, & Joanna Morris

B-44

Effects of verb class and frame frequency on processing

Sudha Arunachalam & David Embick

B-45

Semantic effect in processing Korean double nominative/accusative construction

Kyung Sook Shin

B-46

Processing of negative polarity items in Korean

Sunyoung Lee

B-47

The relation between integration costs, reading times and acceptability-ratings in complex sentences

Manuel Gimenes & François Rigalleau

B-48

The relationship between processing difficulty and grammaticalization: Effects of relative clause type on word order preferences

Laura M. Gonnerman & Celina R. Hayes

B-49

Resolution of globally ambiguous pronouns varies as a function of reading demands.

Andrew J. Stewart, Judith Holler, & Evan Kidd

B-50

Do speakers avoid ambiguities during dialogue?

Sarah L. Haywood, Martin J. Pickering, & Holly P. Branigan