The Language Processing Group (LPG) holds regular meetings for faculty members and students interested in language processing research. This is a relatively informal way to present research to the psycholinguistics community at UTA and to develop collaborative research projects. Presentations at this meeting describe research at various stages of development — completed projects, projects currently underway, research designs, and even just ideas in the field that might be interesting to pursue. Tutorials on useful software packages, analysis techniques, and experimental methodologies will also be held on occasion.
If this is something you might like to participate in, please an email to jeffrey.witzel@uta.edu, and you will be included on a mailing list. This group is open to researchers in any field that connects to psycholinguistics.
Upcoming presentations
- TBA
Past presentations
- Language as a Dynamic System
Michael Spivey (UC Merced) - Data management/preservation
Peace Ossom-Williamson (UTA Libraries) - Selective social learning of novel words in preschool-aged children
Mark A. Sabbagh (Queen’s University) - Frequency attenuation and masked repetition priming
Ken Forster (Macquarie University) - How L2 words activate meaning: Evidence from false memory tasks
Juliet Huynh (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Integration resources in prenominal relative clause processing
Michael Mansbridge (Nagoya University) - EEG Lab Open House!!!!
Jeff Witzel, Naoko Witzel, Ehsan Shafiee Zargar (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Plausibility and online structural processing by native and nonnative speakers
Juyoung Lee (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Surviving the intervention: ERP evidence for intervenor masked priming
Ehsan Shafiee Zargar (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Introduction to LATEX 2
Nathan Eversole (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Long-distance agreement processing: Some eye-tracking data
Nathan Eversole (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Introduction to LATEX 1
Nathan Eversole (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - It’s Time to Split: Morphological Decomposition of Inflectionally Complex Words during Visual Word Recognition
Ehsan Shafiee Zargar (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - When are Clause-Final Verbs Facilitated in Korean?
Suwon Yoon (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) and Masaya Yoshida (Northwestern University) - Processing Russian relative clauses
Iya Khelm (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Factors that influence ambiguity priming
David Gorfein (University of Texas at Dallas) - Processing English subject-verb agreement
Nathan Eversole (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Processing English relative clauses: Some new data
Jeffrey Witzel (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Sweave as a tool for reproducible quantitative analysis reporting
Kristopher Wright (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - The brain’s three engines
Khalid Rashdan (Paris Descartes University) - Masked onset priming in Korean: Evidence for syllable- and phoneme-level effects
Naoko Witzel (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Testing the viability of webDMDX for masked priming experiments
Samantha Cornelius (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Lexical access in Hindi-English bilinguals
Namrata Dubey (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - The influence of phonological and orthographical overlap on the processing of reduced and unreduced relative clauses
Iya Khelm (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Long-distance attraction effects in SVA processing
Nathan Eversole (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - Binding accessibility and online anaphora processing
Michael Mansbridge (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - DMDX: A tutorial on a flexible and FREE software package for data collection and analysis
Jeffrey Witzel (Department of Linguistics and TESOL) - The effect of multiple primes on meaning disambiguation
David Gorfein (University of Texas at Dallas) - The neural correlates of language attitudes
Christopher Stewart (Department of Modern Languages) - Some forensic applications of psycholinguistics
Ruel Macaraeg (Tarrant County College; attorney at law) - How words are represented in bilingual memory
Naoko Witzel (Department of Psychology) - The effect of speaker ethnicity on the perception of ‘ethnic’ socio-phonetic variation
Christopher Stewart (Department of Modern Languages)