Here you may access all of the posters presented at virtual CUNY 2020. Click on each poster title to be taken to the OSF repository with the poster, if available. You may also access the OSF repository directly here.

???? Poster Session A (Thursday 12:10-2PM)

Poster NumberTitleAuthors
A1Biological foundations of syntactic movement directionsTingwu Lee and Shiao-hui Chan
A2Incremental understanding of conjunctive generic sentencesMH Tessler, Karen Gu and Roger Levy
A3Estimating the semantic properties of words with simple mean ratings can be misleadingVan Rynald Liceralde and Peter Gordon
A4Agents’ goals affect placement of event endpointsAriel Mathis and Anna Papafragou
A5Thematic role assignment difficulty revealed by a forced choice taskJon Burnsky and Adrian Staub
A6The interaction of syntactic focus and semantic predictability in comprehension.Eleonora Beier and Fernanda Ferreira
A7Multiple focus indicators influence modifier attachment separatelyKaty Carlson and David Potter
A8Information structure facilitates pairing contrastive ellipsis remnants with non-local correlatesMarju Kaps
A9Timing and (mis)interpretation of NPI illusionsHanna Muller, Celeste Joly, Iria de-Dios-Flores, Philip Resnik and Colin Phillips
A10Tracking the time course of the NPI illusion: why do only some appear online?Wesley Orth, Masaya Yoshida and Shayne Sloggett
A11Examining the origins of errors in processing the quantifier every: an eye-tracking studyTingting Wang, Nick Feroce, Jesus Briseno, Caitlin Coughlin and Utako Minai
A12Preparing the lecture in three hours - Tense and aspect in the interpretation and processing of ambiguous adverbialsBritta Stolterfoht, Giuliano Armenante and Larissa Specht
A13Social exposure to gender-variance influences the real-time processing of pronounsLauren Ackerman
A14Structures of talker variability in rising vs. falling declarative utterancesXin Xie, Andrés Buxó-Lugo and Chigusa Kurumada
A15Processing COMP-trace violations in German: implications for syntaxAnkelien Schippers, Margreet Vogelzang and Esther Ruigendijk
A16Hierarchy vs. linearity in human language interpretationCas Coopmans, Helen De Hoop, Peter Hagoort and Andrea Martin
A17Investigating the grammatical SNARC effect for collective nounsFabian Hurler, Nikole Patson, Tessa Warren and Barbara Kaup
A18Volitionality on the split intransitivity in Japanese: an acceptability judgment studyHanako Wada and Hajime Ono
A19Processing weak crossover in forward and backward A’-dependenciesJun Lyu, Jiwon Yun and Daniel Finer
A20Adaptive reading in response to connective location and clause orderKole Norberg and Scott Fraundorf
A21Eye movements when failing to notice word transpositionsKuan-Jung Huang and Adrian Staub
A22The processing of subject-predicate and topic-commentary sentences in Brazilian PortugueseLorrane Ventura
A23Predictive Processing of Coordination in CCGMiloš Stanojević, John Hale and Mark Steedman
A24Verb position and flexible constituent order processing: Comparing verb-final and verb- medial languagesSavithry Namboodiripad, Lorenzo Garcia-Amaya, Alex Kramer, Stephen Tobin, Yourdanis Sedarous, Nicholas Henriksen, Julie Boland and Andries Coetzee
A25The Role of Shallow Processing in Agreement AttractionUtku Türk and Pavel Logacev
A26Active Search in cataphoric Processing extends past the SubjectAnna Giskes and Dave Kush
A27Disjoint is off the hook: Principle B constrains predictive resolution of cataphorsDave Kush and Brian Dillon
A28Language experience affects pronoun comprehension in implicit causality sentencesElyce Williams and Jennifer Arnold
A29The processing of reflexives depends on verbal agreement: Evidence from HebrewMaayan Keshev and Aya Meltzer-Asscher
A30Many dependencies show retrieval interference, and ellipsis does too!Dan Parker, Hayley Shankle and Irene Williams
A31Morphological identity and voice mismatch in VP ellipsis: An interference-based accountJesse Harris and Adrian Brasoveanu
A32Representations underlining ambiguity avoidanceKumiko Fukumura, Céline Pozniak and F.-Xavier Alario
A33Ambiguity Resolution in Wh-Filler Gap DependencyNayoun Kim, Keir Moulton and Masaya Yoshida
A34An experimental investigation of three purported exceptions to island effects in EnglishJayeon Park and Jon Sprouse
A35D-linked wh-dependencies and island effectsMichael Dover and Jeffrey Witzel
A36Gap-filling in syntactic islands: Evidence for island penetrability from the Maze TaskSandra Villata, Whitney Tabor and Jon Sprouse
A37Structural priming is influenced by both syntax and plausibilityL. Robert Slevc and Andrés Buxó-Lugo
A38Syntactic adaption for reduced relative clauses is not reducible to task adaptationAvery Malone and Gail Mauner
A39The processing of pronominal relative clauses: Evidence from eye movementsDouglas Roland, Gail Mauner and Yuki Hirose
A40The role of memory in subject-object asymmetry with relative clausesFanting Kung and Peter Gordon
A41Investigating the role of context in comprehension using topical surprisal: an fMRI studyShohini Bhattasali and Philip Resnik
A42Neural language models capture some, but not all, agreement attraction effectsSuhas Arehalli and Tal Linzen
A43Processing Temporal Violations in a Language with Aspectual Markers: An ERP Study in ThaiWilasinee Siriboonpipattana, Lyndsey Nickels, Roelien Bastiaanse, Paul Sowman and Srdjan Popov
A44Temporal mismatch guides the prediction of Mandarin relative clauses: Evidence from ERPsXiao Yang, Stephen Politzer-Ahles, Utako Minai, Alison Gabriele and Robert Fiorentino
A45Lexical versus compositional World-Language Relations: Event-Related Brain Potential effects during Second Language ProcessingKatja Maquate, Carsten Schliewe, Jennifer Lewendon and Pia Knoeferle
A46Scalar implicatures: differential engagement of brain regions across tasksTal Tehan and Einat Shetreet
A47How to resolve NPI intervention effects on WHY: Evidence from an ERP studyDaeho Chung, Myung-Kwan Park and Wonil Chung
A48Stronger prediction leads to greater processing cost during sentence ambiguity resolution: A simultaneous eye-tracking and EEG studyYi-Lun Weng, An Nguyen, Rachel Ryskin and Zhenghan Qi
A49"Ambiguous" isn't "Underspecified": Evidence from the Maze taskShayne Sloggett, Nick Van Handel, Kelsey Sasaki, John Duff, Stephanie Rich, Wesley Orth, Pranav Anand and Amanda Rysling
A50Prenominal and postnominal adjectives in French: An ERP study.Émilie Courteau, Clara Misirliyan, Karsten Steinhauer and Phaedra Royle
A51ERP effects of how come and adjunct wh-questionsNicolaus Schrum and Jon Sprouse
A52Auditory processing of English compound wordsAva Creemers
A53Prosodic cue weighting in ambiguity resolution by native and non-native listenersHyunah Baek
A54Is absence of evidence evidence of unacceptability? Testing Conservatism via Entrenchment with novel derived wordsLibby Barak, Martin Hilpert and Adele Goldberg
A55Do children with autism spectrum disorder use prosodic cues to infer others’ mental states?Peng Zhou, Weiyi Ma and Likan Zhan
A56Sentence context and spelling ability influence parafoveal processing of phonology in readingSara Milligan and Elizabeth Schotter
A57The integration of Mandarin third tone sandhi in auditory sentence disambiguationWei Lai and Aini Li
A58Prosodic cues in on-line semantic processing – ERP evidence on quantifier restrictionPetra Augurzky and Rolf Ulrich
A59Lexical and contextual cue effects in discourse expectations: experimenting with German 'zwar...aber' vs. English 'sure...but'Juliane Schwab and Mingya Liu
A60Pragmatics and event structure: A closer look at their interaction in language productionMonica Do, Anna Papafragou and John Trueswell
A61Antecedent saliency and empathy in JapaneseShinichi Shoji
A62The time-course of plausibility and predictability effects during discourse comprehensionSophie Greene, Trevor Brothers, Elizabeth Weber, Santiago Noriega and Gina Kuperberg
A63Accommodating presuppositions: it’s focus-sensitivity that makes it hardAlexander Göbel
A64Another slice? – UID constrains the omission of content words in fragmentsRobin Lemke, Lisa Schäfer, Heiner Drenhaus and Ingo Reich
A65Composing expressive information in context is damn trickyStanley Donahoo, Valeria Pfeifer and Vicky Lai
A66Acceptability of VP Ellipsis: discourse conditions vs. syntactic identityPhilip Miller and Barbara Hemforth
A67The Effect of Disfluency on Memory Following Sentence ComprehensionEvgeniia Diachek and Sarah Brown-Schmidt
A68#foodie: Implications of interacting with social media for memoryJordan Zimmerman and Sarah Brown-Schmidt
A69The effects of character properties on reading ChineseYou Li and Kiel Christianson
A70Explaining away the ease of retrieving “alleged Venezuelan communists”: Attention and time spent, not semantic complexity alone, predict reading timesHossein Karimi and Eva Wittenberg
A71Word frequency, proficiency and L2 exposure/use in masked translation primingAdel Chaouch-Orozco, Jorge González Alonso and Jason Rothman
A72Retention of surface information during L1 and L2 reading: An eye-tracking studyDenisa Bordag, Andreas Opitz, Max Polter and Michael Meng
A73Code-switching in the presence of othersEdith Kaan, Souad Kheder, Ann Kreidler, Aleksandra Tomic and Jorge Valdes Kroff
A74Computationally investigating L1 influence on L2 productionTiwalayo Eisape, William Merrill, Sven Dietz and Joshua K. Hartshorne
A75The time course of bilingual lexico-semantic access within and across languages: Evidence from the boundary paradigm during readingLiv Hoversten and Clara Martin
A76Effects of verb and classifier constraints on expectations in first (Vietnamese) and second (German) language comprehensionAine Ito, Huong Thi Thu Nguyen and Pia Knoeferle
A77L2 Syntactic Adaptation in Comprehension: Evidence for Implicit LearningEunjin Chun
A78The Priming of Dutch Passives in Arabic-Dutch and French-Dutch Bilingual SpeakersRianne van Lieburg, Edwige Sijyeniyo, Robert Hartsuiker and Sarah Bernolet
A79Defining “native-like” argument interpretation in SVO/OVS Spanish sentencesRussell Simonsen and Dustin Chacón
A80Controlling for human response latency with continuous-time deconvolutional regressionCory Shain and William Schuler
A81Recurrent neural networks use discourse context in human-like garden path alleviationForrest Davis and Marten van Schijndel
A82A Gradient Symbolic Computation parser: Parallel parsing in a continuous dynamical systemPyeong Whan Cho, Matthew Goldrick and Paul Smolensky
A83Learning Processing Models: Reinforcement Learning for Linguistic Skill AcquisitionAdrian Brasoveanu and Jakub Dotlacil
A84Assessing the reliability of informal acceptability judgments in Chinese syntaxZhong Chen, Yuhang Xu and Zhiguo Xie
A85Behavioral evidence for linguistic prediction in older, but not younger, readers of GermanKatja Haeuser and Jutta Kray
A86Is children’s iconicity preference universal? Evidence from Mandarin adverbial sentencesLaura de Ruiter, Si Chen, Alexander Etz and Peizhi Wen
A87Can 2.5-year-olds use expectations about polysemy for disambiguation?Sammy Floyd and Casey Lew-Williams
A88A within-subjects comparison of the acquisition of quantity-related inferencesAlicia Parrish and Ailís Cournane
A89Comprehension of Conjunction by English-speaking Adults and ChildrenSherry Yong Chen, Filipe Hisao Kobayashi, Loes Koring, Cory Bill, Leo Rosenstein and Martin Hackl
A90Heritage speakers may not only have unique grammars, but also processing strategiesLeeAnn Stover, Christen Madsen II and Gita Martohardjono

???? Poster Session B (Friday 12:10 – 2PM)

Poster NumberTitleAuthors
B1Individual differences suggest common semantic competition in sentence comprehension and productionShihui Wu, Lisa Henderson and Silvia Gennari
B2Distance affects the retrieval of presuppositional antecedentsJan Winkowski, Jakub Dotlačil and Rick Nouwen
B3Conceptual parallels between event and object reference in English: A new paradigm shows that demonstratives refer to more complex eventsJoshua Wampler and Eva Wittenberg
B4Exhaustivity of questions embedded under know, predict, agree and surpriseLea Fricke and Edgar Onea
B5Topic drop is more than dropping topics: corpus linguistic and experimental investigations on factors that facilitate the recovery of the omitted elementLisa Schäfer, Robin Lemke, Ingo Reich and Heiner Drenhaus
B6Evidence against depth of processing and reliance on syntax alone in Comparative Illusion sentencesMaria Goldshtein and Kiel Christianson
B7Error minimization and the sweet spot for scalar propertiesSeungjin Hong, Jean-Pierre Koenig and Gail Mauner
B8Do Arguments Appear Closer Crosslinguistically?Zoey Liu
B9Effects of contrastive focus on lexical predictability during sentence readingMatthew Lowder, Gwynna Ryan, Jaclyn Opie and Emily Kaminsky
B10Grammatical constraints on focus alternatives? The case of phi-features in CzechRadim Lacina and E. Matthew Husband
B11Is 'sonderlich' losing its NPI-status?Juliane Schwab, Mingya Liu and Jutta Mueller
B12Illusory Licensing from Inaccessible Antecedents in Presuppositional DependencySherry Yong Chen and E. Matthew Husband
B13Illusions of ungrammaticality: evidence from PPIWesley Orth, Masaya Yoshida and Shayne Sloggett
B14Comprehending the Present Perfect Lifetime Effect: Integrating lifetime information with tense and aspect during readingDaniela Palleschi, Camilo Rodríguez Ronderos and Pia Knoeferle
B15Processing aspect in Russian and English: Evidence from Visual World eye trackingSerge Minor and Gillian Ramchand
B16Setting the scene: Saliency and meaning in linearization during scene descriptionsGwendolyn Rehrig, Taylor Hayes, Henderson John and Fernanda Ferreira
B17What does that tell us about production?: That speakers plan sentences hierarchicallyShota Momma and Michael Wilson
B18The distribution of locative inversions: testing structural vs processing accountsGiuseppe Ricciardi, Rachel Ryskin and Edward Gibson
B19Sentence-recall involves de- and encoding of syntaxJens Roeser, Mark Torrance, Mark Andrews and Rodilene Gittoes
B20Order, relevance and script knowledge: Revising temporal structuresMaria Spychalska
B21Wh- sub-extraction from DPs: the subject vs predicate divide in processing copular constructionsPaolo Lorusso, Mattteo Greco, Cristiano Chesi and andrea moro
B22Dropping an argument is easier than filling It: processing of empty categories in a pro-drop languageYanyu Xiong, Sharlene Newman and Chien-Jer Lin
B23Structural Frequency Effects in Comprehenders’ Noisy-Channel InferencesYingtong Liu, Rachel Ryskin, Richard Futrell and Edward Gibson
B24Orthographic and featural distance in comprehenders’ noise modelMaayan Keshev and Aya Meltzer-Asscher
B25Cross-linguistic competition in agreement processingSonthaya Rattanasak, Nattama Pongpairoj and Kiel Christianson
B26Closest Conjunct Agreement in Right Node Raising as minimized ungrammaticalityZheng Shen
B27Retrieval interference or ease of thematic integration?Nino Grillo, Shayne Sloggett, Fani Karageorgou and Andrea Santi
B28English long-distance reflexive binding informs ellipsis structureDavid Potter and Katy Carlson
B29Mood as an influence on Persian reference resolutionDennis Ryan Storoshenko and Elias Abdollahnejad
B30Parallelism beyond coordinationKathleen Hall and Masaya Yoshida
B31(Pseudo-)reflexive possessive binding : crosslinguistic experimentsSuzanne Lesage, Barbara Hemforth and Olivier Bonami
B32Inter-reading Time: A Simple Measure of Sentence Processing DifficultyTyler Peckenpaugh
B33Disambiguating stripping ellipsis in Persian: How parallelism and locality interactVahideh Rasekhi and Jesse Harris
B34Reanalysis processesHiroki Fujita
B35New data on the nature of competition between indefinites and definitesNadine Bade and Florian Schwarz
B36Lingering misinterpretation of garden-path sentences is tied to incorrect syntactic representationYujing Huang and Fernanda Ferreira
B37Beyond surface constituency: new evidence from syntactic primingAlina Konradt and Kriszta Szendroi
B38Processing of relative clause attachment ambiguity in KoreanSo Young Lee
B39Contextual Influence on Relative-Clause Attachment Ambiguity ResolutionYoko Nakano
B40Asymmetric processing of Mandarin relative clausesTzu-Yun Tung and Jonathan Brennan
B41Incorporating context into a computational similarity measure: introducing relative relevant cosine (RRC)Libby Barak and Adele Goldberg
B42Rational adaptation in lexical prediction: The influence of prediction strengthTal Ness and Aya Meltzer-Asscher
B43Noisy channel processing of questionsYuan Bian, Roger Levy and Edward Gibson
B44Evaluating the effect of model inductive bias and training data in predicting human reading timesEthan Wilcox, Jon Gauthier, Peng Qian, Jennifer Hu and Roger Levy
B45Cognitive Modeling for Semantics: Discourse Representation Structures in MemoryAdrian Brasoveanu and Jakub Dotlacil
B46A Minimalist Parsing Account of Gradience in Acceptability JudgmentsAniello De Santo
B47Connectivity evidence for a direct generation approach to pseudogappingPhilip Miller and Till Poppels
B48Examining the roles of semantic iconicity and language-specific usage on children’s comprehension of complex sentences in HebrewShiri Hornick, Laura de Ruiter and Einat Shetreet
B49Testing temporal boundaries of composition in low-frequency neural oscillationsChia-Wen Lo and Jonathan Brennan
B50Cortical hemodynamic responses to degraded speech shows activation in right fronto-temporal cortex and Broca’s areaDon Bell-Souder, Satu Lamminmaki and Anu Sharma
B51Using ERPs to investigate the processing of singular theyOlivia Leventhal, Sadie Camilliere, Peiyao Chen and Daniel Grodner
B52ERPs reveal that quantification matters for both L1 and L2 processing of subject-verb agreement: English natives and Chinese L2ers comparedYesi Cheng, Jason Rothman, Ian Cunnings, Zoe Schlueter and David Miller
B53Modeling Suspense in Reading as Uncertainty Reduction over Neural RepresentationsDavid Wilmot and Frank Keller
B54Contextual constraint and the frontal post-N400 positivity: A large-sample, pre-registered ERP studyKate Stone, Shravan Vasishth and Titus von der Malsburg
B55ERPs reveals that context modulates real-time processing of semantic relations through prime word evaluation and relational similarityAlexandre Herbay, Phaedra Royle and Karsten Steinhauer
B56Not all the pasts are the same: An ERP study of the temporal constraints of the Mandarin aspectual markers -le and -guoCollart Aymeric and Chan Shiaohui
B57Do first language neural processes for morphosyntax transfer to the second language? Using event-related potentials to expand the evidence of cross-linguistic influenceIrene Finestrat, David Abugaber, Alicia Luque and Kara Morgan-Short
B58Prosody and relative clause interpretation: Two plausibility judgment experimentsDaniel Amy and Jeffrey Witzel
B59Prominence effects on pre-lexical processing: time-course evidence from vowel perceptionJeremy Steffman
B60Structural priming from nonnative-accented speechRachel Williams, Karly Schleicher and Iva Ivanova
B61Differential effects of print exposure on subphonemic sensitivity and lexical competition during spoken word recognition: An individual differences approachSpyridoula Cheimariou and Efthymia C. Kapnoula
B62Listeners can use tone information to predict: Evidence from Mandarin ChineseWing-Yee Chow and Yiling Huo
B63Non-immediate effects of Tagalog voice information on parsing argument orderIvan Paul Bondoc and Amy Schafer
B65MaltLex: A database of visual lexical decision responses to 11,000 Maltese wordsJonathan Geary
B66The Timing of Repetition PrimingKayleigh Nemeth and Peter Gordon
B67Processing effort is a poor predictor of word-order typologyBrennan Gonering and Emily Morgan
B68Not all cues are created equal: Retrieving gender and number in Portuguese relative clausesAlexandra Lawn
B69Subject gaps are not inherently worse than object gaps in islands: Experimental Evidence in Support of the ECPAdam Morgan
B70Subject-island constraint? PP extraction depends on the constructionAnne Abeillé, Barbara Hemforth, Elodie Winckel and Edward Gibson
B71Incremental processing of grammatical gender in bilingual childrenJasmijn Bosch and Francesca Foppolo
B72Are bilingual logical representations shared?: Priming scopally ambiguous sentences in English, Estonian, and DutchMieke Slim and Napoleon Katsos
B73Structural priming and code-switching: Exploring the position of code alternation in bilingual Spanish-English and English-Spanish speakersJaviera Alfaro Chat, martin pickering and Holly Branigan
B74Contrastive focus in Russian as a second or heritage languageTania Ionin, Maria Goldshtein, Tatiana Luchkina and Sofya Styrina
B75Integrated bilingual syntax: the role of shared voice without shared word orderYue Yu, Martin Pickering and Holly Branigan
B76Children understand the compositionality of complex numeralsJihyun Hwang, Diego Guerrero Lopez, Rachael McCollum and Joonkoo Park
B77Learning subject preference via first-mentionJuhani Järvikivi, Liam Blything, Abigail Toth and Anja Arnhold
B78Learning to produce relative clauses in Mandarin L1 acquisition – The role of animacy configuration patternsLili Ji and Johannes Gerwien
B79Online processing of negation in 2-year-olds: Evidence from eye-trackingVishal Sunil Arvindam, Maxime Tulling and Ailís Cournane
B80Information Structure modulates the Processing of Object Pronouns in GermanRegina Hert and Juhani Järvikivi
B81Integration of presuppositions during mental state predictionsSamet Albayrak, Umut Özge and Duygu Özge
B82Examining the use of discourse cues in second language sentence processingTingting Wang and Alison Gabriele
B83“Listen my story”: ERP sensitivity to argument structure violations in L2Chia-Hsuan Liao and Ellen Lau
B84Processing implicatures: a comparison between direct and indirect SIsPaul Marty, Romoli Jacopo, Yasutada Sudo, Bob van Tiel and Richard Breheny
B85Prediction explains effects of both semantic and social cues on pronoun interpretationValerie Langlois and Jennifer Arnold
B86When tense cues matter and when they don’t: Processing object state change in activity eventsSarah Hye-yeon Lee and Elsi Kaiser
B87Priming and anti-priming in intra- and inter-speaker variationAini Li and Meredith Tamminga
B89Factors influencing jury instruction comprehension: new insights from working memoryJanet Randall, Samantha Bonnin, Samantha Laureano, Ashley Robbins and Yian Xu
B90Collocational frequency and context effects on advanced non-native idiom processingEvelyn Milburn, Mila Vulchanova and Valentin Vulchanov

???? Poster Session C (Saturday 12:10 – 2PM)

Poster NumberTitleAuthors
C1Context Specificity of Semantic Interference Effects in ProductionChanning Hambric, Padraig O’Seaghdha, Almut Hupbach and Jeff Heflin
C3Testing theories of metaphor processing with new data: the case of verb-object metaphorsCamilo Rodríguez Ronderos, Ernesto Guerra and Pia Knoeferle
C4The time course of adverbial order processing: Adverbial type mattersLarissa Specht and Britta Stolterfoht
C5Inferring comparison classes from syntactic cues and world knowledgeMH Tessler, Polina Tsvilodub and Roger Levy
C6What the inference task tells us about numbers, and what numbers can tell us about the inference taskRichard Breheny, Blanche Gonzales De Linares, Erying Qin and Chao Sun
C7Interpretation of count vs. mass nouns: Evidence for universalitySea Hee Choi and Tania Ionin
C8Prominence scales guide incremental sentence comprehension in GeorgianSteven Foley and Matt Wagers
C10It's not just NPI, is it?Wesley Orth
C11Epistemic ‘must p’ is literally a strong statementGiuseppe Ricciardi, Rachel Ryskin and Edward Gibson
C12“He may certainly have forgotten”: the processing of nested epistemic expressionsZhuang Qiu and Fernanda Ferreira
C13The role of working memory for syntactic formulation in language productionEric Martell, Renato Diaz, Graciela Favela and Iva Ivanova
C14Learning Structural Alternations: What tells learners how to generalize?Sin Hang Lau, Shota Momma and Victor Ferreira
C15“The Suffixing Preference”: A Preliminary Report on Processing Affixes in GeorgianAlice Harris and Arthur G. Samuel
C16Inflectional affixes that walk by themselves: how noun forms are processed in RussianDaria Chernova, Svetlana Alexeeva and Natalia Slioussar
C17Are adjective ordering preferences really universal and robust?Nitzan Trainin and Einat Shetreet
C18A-maze by any other nameShayne Sloggett, Nick Van Handel and Amanda Rysling
C20Crosslinguistic Extent of Dependency Length MinimizationZoey Liu
C21Spanish gender-neutral sentence processingAna Zarwanitzer and Carlos Gelormini-Lezama
C22Agreement attraction in nonnative language processing: The effect of sentence complexityEun-Kyoung (Rosa) Lee
C23What cues caused facilitatory interference in processing Japanese honorific expressions?Atsushi Yuhaku and Yoko Nakano
C24Two types of wh-dependencies: Same, but differentDuk-Ho Jung and Grant Goodall
C25Referential form, word order and emotional valence in Turkish pronoun resolutionDuygu Özge, Ebru Evcen and Joshua K. Hartshorne
C26Coreference information guides human expectations during natural readingEvan Jaffe, Cory Shain and William Schuler
C27Looking ahead: Subject pronoun interpretation depends on what is (not) mentioned laterJINA SONG and Elsi Kaiser
C28The overt gender marking does not dampen intrusion effect in reflexive processingMyung Hye Yoo and Arild Hestvik
C29Anything can be elided if you know how: sluicing, voice mismatch, and tough movementTill Poppels and Andrew Kehler
C30Syntactic and semantic structure in VP ellipsis and VP anaphora processingYuhang Xu and Jeffrey Runner
C32Garden-paths: More text means more rereading, but little revisionKiel Christianson, Nayoung Kim, Sarah-Elizabeth Deshaies and Anna Tsiola
C33Eye blink rate and performance of reanalysis in garden path sentencesAya Meltzer Asscher and Lola Karsenti
C34Prime processing behavior as a window into syntactic priming mechanismsKristen Tooley
C35Accounting for syntactic complexity in Hungarian relative clausesEszter Ronai and Ming Xiang
C36Acceptability of relative clause extraposition in English: Effects of predicate type and givennessJosh Weirick and Elaine Francis
C37Object relatives are not always more difficult to process, even in Spanish. Evidence from a study of relative clauses comprehension with psychological predicatesMarisol Murujosa, Carolina Gattei, Diego Shalom and Yamila Sevilla
C38Stepping off the garden path in Brazilian Portuguese: Discourse effects on parsingAna Besserman and Elsi Kaiser
C39Degrees of reanalysis in pragmatically and syntactically motivated dependenciesMaayan Keshev and Aya Meltzer-Asscher
C40Comparing the processing of single-word and multi-word codeswitches during bilingual spoken language comprehensionMichael Johns and Giuli Dussias
C41Unable or unwilling? Being under-informative is interpreted differently for native and non-native speakersSarah Fairchild, Ariel Mathis and Anna Papafragou
C42The Influence of Syntactic Complexity on L2 PredictionEunjin Chun
C43Lingering misinterpretation in L1 and L2 sentence processing: Evidence from structural primingHiroki Fujita and Ian Cunnings
C44Enhancing sensitivity to nominal number facilitates the processing of subject-verb agreement in second language learnersWenting Tang, Robert Fiorentino and Alison Gabriele
C45Impact of the MRI environment on eye-tracking measures in a linguistic prediction taskJennifer Mack, Colleen Ward and Sofia Stratford
C46Disentangling semantic association from semantic composition in the LATLJixing Li and Liina Pylkkanen
C47Using MEG measures of phoneme surprisal to adjudicate between competing linguistic theories of full stem reduplication: Reduplication vs. compounding in TagalogSamantha Wray and Alec Marantz
C48An Information-Theoretic Characterization of Language Production in Primary Progressive AphasiaNeguine Rezaii, Rachel Ryskin, Claire Cordella, Bradford Dickerson and Edward Gibson
C49Definitely saw it coming? Definiteness reveals the nature of prenominal ERP effects in predictive processingDamien S. Fleur, Monique Flecken, Joost Rommers and Mante S. Nieuwland
C50fMRI Evidence for the Existence and Function of Animacy PredictionsMichelle Colvin, Griffin Koch, Haley Dresang, Tessa Warren, Michael Walsh Dickey and Marc Coutanche
C51Is Semantic Composition in the Left Anterior Temporal Lobe Blind to Syntax?Songhee Kim and Liina Pylkkanen
C52Did she look at him on purpose? ERP evidence that agentivity features influence pronoun resolution differentlyFranziska Kretzschmar and Ingmar Brilmayer
C53Probing the neural correlates of argument structure: A fMRI study of naturalistic languageShohini Bhattasali, Murielle Popa-Fabre and John Hale
C54Examining behavioral and electrophysiological coherence in a construction demonstrating gradient acceptabilityTamarae Hildebrandt
C55Anaphora Resolution of Mandarin Reflexive Ziji: An ERP StudyXu Yan and yuxia WANG
C56Rhythmic priming of structure processingDavid Gyorgy, Lna Azzam Ali, Daphne Bavelier, Sonja Kotz, Doug Saddy, Antonella Sorace and Julie Franck
C57Age doesn’t matter, but speech rate does: A longitudinal corpus study of disfluenciesEleonora Beier, Suphasiree Chantavarin and Fernanda Ferreira
C58Delexicalised Auditory Priming of Implicit ProsodyJoy Mills
C59Reduplicated onsets impede word recognition more than reduplicated nucleiSkye Anderson
C60Reconstruction at the pragmatics interface: Evidence from Dutch scramblingGert-Jan Schoenmakers
C61Human relationships matter: Discourse-level processing of nominal possessivesJesse Storbeck and Elsi Kaiser
C62The processing of direct discourse: When a separable speech act sticks aroundJohn Duff, Pranav Anand, Adrian Brasoveanu and Amanda Rysling
C63Linguistic cues facilitate children’s understanding of belief-reporting sentencesXiaowen Zhang and Peng Zhou
C64Production expectations modulate contrastive inferencesElisa Kreiss and Judith Degen
C65Online-Processing of Protagonists’ Perspective-TakingSara Meuser, Stefan Hinterwimmer and Maximilian Hörl
C66Evidence for subunit structure when gesturers communicate in/transitive actionsChuck Bradley
C67The use of alternatives in incremental processingChao Sun, Katharina Spalek and Richard Breheny
C68The development of simile comprehension: From similarity to scalar implicatureMadeleine Long, Vishakha Shukla and Paula Rubio-Fernández
C69“Every Horse didn’t Jump over the Fence”: Scope Ambiguity via Pragmatic ReasoningSherry Yong Chen and Bob van Tiel
C70An efficient communication account of grammatical featuresFrancis Mollica and Charles Kemp
C71Processing causatives in first language acquisition with a computational approachGuanghao You, Moritz Daum and Sabine Stoll
C72Why slow words sometimes finish first: mapping cloze to activation dynamicsMasato Nakamura and Colin Phillips
C73Deep vs. shallow computational models of human eye movementYohei Oseki and Masayuki Asahara
C74Do particle verbs have shared or separate lexical representations from their base verbs?xuemei chen and Robert Hartsuiker
C75Binding options of German demonstrative pronouns: a large-sample study and a computational modelUmesh Patil and Stefan Hinterwimmer
C7619 month-olds represent and incrementally parse filler-gap dependenciesMina Hirzel, Laurel Perkins and Jeffrey Lidz
C77Interpretative preferences of 7- to 10-year-olds in German reference resolutionLiam Blything, Regina Hert, Maialen Iraola Azpiroz, Shanley Allen and Juhani Järvikivi
C78Engaging cognitive control may help children ignore unreliable cues during sentence processingZoe Ovans, Jared Novick and Yi Ting Huang
C79Age of acquisition and gender cues in the production of number agreement in bilingualsRebecca Foote
C80Picture naming in adults and children: effects of codability and frequency provide evidence for cascading activation in productionMargaret Kandel and Jesse Snedeker
C81The processing of grammatical aspect by Russian-speaking children and adults: A Visual World eye-tracking studySerge Minor, Natalia Mitrofanova and Gillian Ramchand
C82Visual clarity and spelling ability affect the use of sentence context for word recognitionAlex Sciuto, Sara Milligan and Elizabeth Schotter
C83The online advantage of repairing metrical structure: Stress shift in pupillometryCanaan Breiss, Jesse Harris and Amanda Rysling
C84Dissociable effects of lexical repetition within clauses versus across clause boundariesMatthew Lowder, Antonio Cardoso and Michael Pittman
C85The application of signal detection theory to acceptability judgmentsYujing Huang and Fernanda Ferreira
C86Investigating the Interplay between Morpho-syntax and Memory for Events: the Case of Past ParticiplesYanina Prystauka, Lindsey Neri, Grace Roy and Gerry Altmann
C87Individuals’ “autistic” traits predict variability in sentence comprehension performance: Linguistic components of the Autism Quotient questionnaireMuye Zhang, Catalina Mourgues, Martín Fuchs, Jisu Sheen, Nanyan Wu, Garima Chopra and Maria Pinango
C88“No gender mentioned, but I’d say male”: Gender bias through production about news storiesBethany Gardner and Sarah Brown-Schmidt
C89What’s in a grammar? Mainstream speakers’ processing of English negative concord.Cynthia Lukyanenko and Frances Blanchette