4th International Workshop on Language Production
Transcript of 4th International Workshop on Language Production
4th International Workshop on Language Production
3rd – 5th September 2007, Münster
Fürstenberghaus Am Domplatz 20-22, F5
organized by:
Arbeitseinheit Zwitserlood Psychologisches Institut II
Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster
Program
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 1
welcome
Dear Colleagues,
Welcome to Münster and the International Workshop on Language Production! We are
delighted to have you with us. It is already the 4th workshop in a series which was
started by Xavier Alario and Albert Costa in Marseille four years ago. Niels Schiller was
our kind host in Maastricht and Matt Goldrick at the Northwestern University. It is, once
more, our common interest in the functioning of the language production system that
brings us together. In the following three days, data, their interpretation and
consequences for models will be presented and discussed in an informal environment.
Talks and posters will inform us about new findings from psycholinguistic and
neurolinguistic perspectives and we will have ample time for exchange.
The DFG and our host, the Westfälische Wilhelms-University of Münster, are supporting
this workshop. The work and suggestions of the Scientific Committee, Xavier Alario
(Université de Provence, France), Albert Costa (Universitat de Barcelona, Spain), Victor
Ferreira (University of California at San Diego, USA) and Matt Goldrick (Northwestern
University at Chicago, USA) have contributed greatly to the quality of this workshop. It
simply would not have been possible without their help and that of our support back
home. Finally yet importantly, we would like to thank the presenters for taking the effort
to come to Münster to present their latest research and findings. Thanks very much for
being here, and in advance, for your participation. Enjoy the Workshop!
4th International Workshop on Language Production 2
contents
Schedule 3
Abstracts: talks 6
Abstracts: poster 20
Places to go for lunch and dinner 42
Index of speakers and poster authors 48
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 3
schedule
monday - 3rd sept. 2007
10:00 – 11:00h Carlo Semenza The Neuropsychology of Compound Words
9:00 – 9:30h Coffee & registration
9:30 – 10:00h Workshop introduction
11:00 – 11:15h Coffee break
11:15 – 12:15h Bernadette Jansma & Mart Bles Phonological processing of ignored and attended picture names
12:15 – 13:45h Lunch
13:45 – 14:45h Markus Damian Advance planning of form properties in spoken and written language production tasks
14:45 – 15:45h Joana Cholin Syllables in speech production: Storage vs. computation
15:45 – 18:00h
Poster Session
4th International Workshop on Language Production 4
tuesday - 4th sept. 2007
9:00 – 10:00h Rasha Abdel Rahman & Alissa Melinger Speaking in a meaningful context: The flexible microstructure of language production
10:00 – 11:00h
Gerard Kempen Sentence production and grammatical cognition: The representation and computation of linear order
11:00 – 11:15h Coffee break
11:15 – 12:15h
Ben Maassen Modeling speech motor control in normal and disordered speech. Cognitive and developmental issues
schedule
12:15 – 13:45h
Lunch
13:45 – 14:45h Wolfram Ziegler What disordered articulation may tell us about phonetic plans
14:45 – 15:45h Judith F. Kroll Holding your tongue: Cross-language competition and inhibition in speaking a second language
15:45 – 16:00h Coffee break
16:00 – 17:00h Christopher T. Kello Evolving and Learning Wordform Lexicons
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 5
schedule
wednesday - 5th sept. 2007
9:00 – 10:00h Jana Iverson There’s More to the Hand than Meets the Eye: Speech-Gesture and Vocal-Motor Development in Typical and Atypical Populations
10:00 – 11:00h Sotaro Kita Speech accompanying gestures facilitate conceptualization processes for speaking
11:00 – 11:15h Coffee break
11:15 – 12:15h Jan Peter de Ruiter & Marijn Lamers
What I see is what you get; a heuristic illusion in human communication
12:15 – 12:30h
Coffee break
12:30 – 13:30h
Final discussion
4th International Workshop on Language Production 6
talk
Carlo Semenza
Language production deficits
Compounds are an extremely interesting domain for neuro-linguistic research. The main findings from recent investigations in aphasia can be summarized as follows:
1) The knowledge of the compound status of a phonological form, that of the compound structure with respect to the position of the components, and that of word building rules have been demonstrated to be independent from the knowledge of the phonological form of the compound.
2) Evidence is there for de/composition along the way in processing, even in the case of opaque compounds.
3) Semantically based, rule based and lexically based gender assignment to compounds is shown to undergo independent processing.
4) There is evidence of essentially simultaneous activation of the compound components in retrieval.
5) All meaningful representations seem to be activated in retrieval, including both those concerning isolated components and that of the whole word.
6) Headedness and position interact in the processing of compounds.
ERPs data showed a more negative-peak in the LAN (and probably also in the N400) component in case of compounds. These results are compatible with a dual route model that posits, in case of compounds, not only a whole-word access, but also an activation of decompositional representations of the constituents. This was ultimately confirmed by longer positive-going after 500 ms for compounds than for other words. While in behavioural analysis no difference was found in processing Left and Right Headed compounds, a differential effect was evidenced on the P300 component between these two conditions.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
10:00h
contact Carlo Semenza
Department of Psychology University of Triest
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 7
talk
monday sept, 3rd 2007
11:15h
contact Bernadette Jansma
Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Faculty of Psychology Maastricht University
Bernadette Jansma & Mart Bles
Neuro-cognition during language production
Humans constantly have to select important stimuli from a complex environment. Most attention research focuses the effects
of visual features on stimulus selection. However, objects do not solely consist of visual properties: their names and meanings may
also influence the selection process. In an fMRI study, subjects viewed blocks of two simultaneously presented pictures which
were either phonologically related (e.g. cat-cap) or unrelated (e.g. cat-pill). In the "attend" match-to-sample task, one of the pictures
had to be monitored for either a specific phonological onset, offset, or semantic category. In the "ignore" task, both pictures had to be
disregarded and a simple comparison was made for lines displayed in between the pictures. Results were most striking for the attend offset and ignore task. In the offset task, unrelated vs.
related pairs revealed higher BOLD signal change in the language network related to phonological encoding, especially in the inferior
frontal gyrus (BA 44), and in the posterior middle temporal gyrus (Wernicke), indicating priming in cases of sophisticated
phonological processing. No relatedness effects were present in the onset and semantic task. For the ignore task the left insula
was more active in related than unrelated conditions, suggesting that the insula processes phonological codes for ignored picture
names, eventually to filter out irrelevant information. The direction of the observed effects is discussed in the context of priming and
selection for relevance.
4th International Workshop on Language Production 8
talk
Markus Damian
Advance planning of form properties in spoken and written language production tasks
A key issue in research on the generation of spoken utterances concerns the extent to which speakers plan ahead at various levels. The scope of advance planning at the level of phonological encoding is at present particularly controversial. Results from a variety of experimental paradigms will be described in which speakers are asked to generate utterances consisting of single or multiple words (picture-word interference, implicit priming, multiple object naming with static and moving displays, Stroop tasks, etc.). In these tasks, the main aim is to identify the degree to which speakers have planned the utterance before they initiate their response. The possibility that speakers may flexibly adjust advance planning to specific experimental situations, and/or to changing task demands, will be discussed. The results from spoken production will also be compared to those from studies in which responses are not spoken, but either typed, or handwritten.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
13:45h
contact Markus Damian
Department of Experimental Psychology,
University of Bristol
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 9
talk
monday sept, 3rd 2007
14:45h
contact Joana Cholin
Department of Cognitive Science, Johns Hopkins University [email protected]
Joana Cholin
Syllables in speech production: Storage versus
computation
Syllables are generally assumed to play a role in spoken language production. There is agreement that syllabic structure contributes
to processes such as phonological word formation and stress assignment. There is, however, disagreement over whether
syllabic structure is retrieved as part of the lexicalized word form, or whether it only emerges in online-syllabification processes that
follow lexical access. In either case, the output of word form encoding is considered to be a phonological word that contains a string of syllables specified for segmental and metrical properties.
A further question concerns the issue of whether or not these syllables activate their corresponding motor programs in a
separate store - the ‘mental syllabary’ - that supplies speakers with precompiled motor programs to facilitate the final steps of
speech planning.
In the first part of my talk, I will review data stemming from different experimental paradigms and different languages that provide evidence for and against the assumption that syllable
structure is a lexical property. I will argue against stored syllabic structure at a lexical level and for a context-dependent, post-
lexical online computation of syllables.
In the second part of my talk, I will review findings and present data that strengthen the view that syllabic motor programs are
retrieved from a mental syllabary. In particular, I will present data from fluent, neurologically intact speakers and from disfluent, neurologically impaired speakers to explore how storage and computation of syllables might interact between the levels of
phonological/phonetic encoding and articulation. Finally, I will address the question of how the incremental execution of
subsequent syllables depends on factors such as frequency and the size of the phonological word.
4th International Workshop on Language Production 10
talk
Rasha Abdel Rahman & Alissa Melinger
Speaking in a meaningful context: The flexible microstructure of language production With a single spoken word, for instance the word “bee”, we can express a variety of different kinds of meanings. Depending on whether we refer to an animal species, an apiary or a hard-working colleague, different semantic features are relevant for the respective concept. I will discuss a series of experiments demonstrating that the context in which an utterance is produced can exert a strong influence on lexicalization. For instance, and in contrast to classic observations in contextually isolated naming paradigms, meaningful contexts can trigger categorically induced facilitation- as well as associatively induced interference effects in single word production. These findings speak against a hard-wired architecture of the production system in which pre-defined sets of features and items are activated. Instead, I will argue for a flexible architecture that is shaped by meaningful contexts and task demands. During speech planning, meaningful relations can be formed and ignored as the specific context requires. This evidence can bring us closer to understanding why dog doesn’t always interfere with poodle whereas bee sometimes interferes with honey.
tuesday sept, 4th 2007
9:00h
contact Rasha Abdel Rahman
Biologische Psychologie/
Psychophysiologie, Humboldt University Berlin
rasha.abdel.rahman@ psychologie.hu-berlin.de
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 11
talk
tuesday sept, 4th 2007
10:00h
contact Gerard Kempen
MPI Nijmegen & Cognitive Psychology Unit, Leiden University
Gerard Kempen
Sentence production and grammatical cognition: The representation and
computation of linear order
Sentence production phenomena are an important source of constraints on models of grammar and of grammatical processing that aim for cognitive plausibility. I start with a critical examination
of experimental and speech error data that are often interpreted as supporting the distinction between a functional and a positional
stage of sentence production. I will argue that the available data do not justify this distinction.
Another widely held assumption concerns the existence of syntactic movement operations and of syntactic traces (gaps) left
behind by such operations. A review of the sentence production evidence reveals that traces/gaps are real, at least in the case of
fronted Wh-constituents. However, I will outline a model of syntax (called Performance Grammar, PG) that generates traces/gaps
without moving constituents around.
The upshot of the foregoing is that the computations giving rise to functional (hierarchical, dominance) structures should be viewed
as distinct from, but intimately intertwined with, linear order computations.
Finally, I address the time course of linear order computations. In the PG formalism, they involve that dispatch syntactic constituents
to particular slots in one-dimensional arrays called topologies. Very often, these rules can predict the target slot of potentially
upcoming constituents at a point in time where the type an/or the lexical content of these constituents is yet to be determined. I will
briefly discuss a set of perception-to-production priming RT experiments whose results are compatible with this property of
linear order computing.
4th International Workshop on Language Production 12
talk
Ben Maassen
Modeling speech motor control in normal and disordered speech: Cognitive and developmental issues Research in speech motor control in normal and disordered speech was inspired in the 1980s by hierarchical computational models, comprising a cognitive-motor interface, and the motor stages planning, programming and execution. In recent years, mounting evidence from behavioral, neurophysiological, clinical, and developmental studies seems to suggest that “..speech, or any motor behavior, is best viewed as a cognitive–motor accomplishment.” (Kent, 2004, p.3). This presentation will give an overview of research in acquired and developmental disorders of speech motor control, which reflects this transition of theoretical orientation. The recent history of research in motor speech disorders can best be illustrated in the field of stuttering research. After the psychosomatic (psychology and learning theory) approach to explain stuttering, which was reaching an impasse in the late 1970s, the focus shifted to speech motor processes in stuttering, especially with respect to the execution stages. In the past two decades, two important developments have taken place. First, it became apparent that speech motor execution alone can not explain the complex symptoms as found in stuttering, but that higher order psycholinguistic and motor planning processes are relevant as well. Second, historical boundaries between the fields of stuttering and other motor speech disorders no longer appeared valid. Parallel developments in research and modeling took place in studies of the dysarthrias and apraxia of speech. Thus, tremendous progress has been made in modeling the facilitation and control of speech movements and understanding the underlying processes, neurological correlates, and pathological conditions. An overview of studies in this field will be presented, starting with the classical distinction between programming and execution deficits, moving towards more interactive models and the role of perception in normal and pathological speech. Studies on the controversial disorder developmental apraxia of speech (DAS) illustrate the main issues involved. Finally, preliminary results of a recently started project aiming at the simulation of DAS with help of the computational-neurological model DIVA (Guenther & Perkell, 2004) will be presented.
tuesday sept, 4th 2007
11:15h
contact Ben Maassen
Medical Psychology, Pediatric Neurology Center,
ENT, Radboud University
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 13
talk
tuesday sept, 4th 2007
13:45h
Contact Wolfram Ziegler
EKN – Clinical Neuropsychology Research Group
Neuropsychological Clinic, Hospital Bogenhausen, Municipal Clinic München wolfram.ziegler @extern.lrz-muenchen.de
Wolfram Ziegler
What disordered articulation may tell us about phonetic
plans
The Nijmegen model of spoken language production incorporates a separate stage referred to as phonetic encoding. At this stage,
speakers are considered to access a store of syllable-sized, holistic motor programs, which provide the input to the motor
execution stage of speech production.
Lesions to anterior regions of the left perisylvian cortex may lead to a syndrome named apraxia of speech. This condition has for
several reasons been related to the phonetic encoding component of Levelt’s model. A straightforward prediction from this model
then is that patients with apraxia of speech have lost access to the syllable lexicon (“dual-route hypothesis”).
In my presentation I will first set the stage for a discussion of this hypothesis and will then present data from several experiments
which disclose that the structure of phonetic plans must be more complex than Levelt’s model postulates. If data from disordered
speakers are accepted as a contribution to the modeling of normal speech production, the conclusion to be drawn from these data is
that phonetic plans have a tree-like, hierarchical structure, extending from a basic gestural level to the level of metrical feet.
Theoretical and clinical consequences of this model will be discussed.
4th International Workshop on Language Production 14
talk
Judith F. Kroll
Holding your tongue: Cross-language competition and inhibition in speaking a second language
Studies of lexical access in spoken production suggest that when bilinguals speak in one language alone, candidates in both languages are active briefly. Two approaches characterize most past research on this topic. In one, variants of picture-word Stroop have examined the effects of distractors related to a picture’s name. The observation of interference or facilitation has been taken to indicate the presence and locus of cross-language activity during speech planning. An alternative is to exploit words in the two languages that share form and meaning. Cross-language similarity produces facilitation in naming cognate pictures, suggesting that the unintended language is active to the level of the phonology. At issue is whether, and to what level, there is activity of the nontarget language during speech planning, whether that activity results in competition for selection, and by what mechanism the word in the intended language is eventually selected. I review recent studies of bilingual word production in which we manipulate the relative activity of each language. Using both behavioral and ERP measures, our results suggest that when bilinguals speak words in their L2, the L1 is active regardless of whether it is required. Other evidence from these experiments suggests that alternatives in both languages compete for selection and that words in the unintended language appear to be inhibited.
tuesday sept, 4th 2007
14:45h
contact Judith Kroll
Department of Psychology, Pennsylvania State
University
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 15
talk
tuesday sept, 5th 2007
16:00
contact Christopher Kello
Department of Psychology, George Mason University
Christopher T. Kello
Evolving and Learning Wordform Lexicons
Wordforms represent words as strings of phonemes or letters that appear in speech or text. A wordform lexicon is the set of
phonological or orthographic wordforms used in a given language, and language users play a role in creating and shaping their
wordform lexicons over the course of language evolution. Language users must also create and shape their own wordform
lexicons over the course of spoken and written language development. Two studies are presented that address each of these two levels of wordform analysis. At the level of language
evolution, communicative constraints on the distinctiveness versus efficiency of wordform lexicons are hypothesized to compete with
each other, and in their balance a scaling law is predicted to emerge in the substring structure of wordform lexicons. Evidence for the predicted scaling law is found in the wordform lexicons of
numerous languages. At the level of language development, a neural network model of wordform acquisition is shown to learn
distributed representations for nearly 75,000 English wordforms. This model overcomes the limitations of slot-based and related
codes that have hindered models of lexical processing for twenty or so years, and its representations are sensitive to the well-
formedness of wordforms as compared with participant ratings. The interplay of these evolutionary and developmental levels of
analysis is discussed.
4th International Workshop on Language Production 16
talk
Jana Iverson
There’s More to the Hand than Meets the Eye: Speech-Gesture and Vocal-Motor Development in Typical and Atypical Populations This talk presents findings from four lines of research designed to address the broader issue of when and how the close relationship between speech production and spontaneous hand gestures develops. The first focuses on the relationship between gesture as a predictor of developing language in typically- and atypically-developing toddlers. The second explores the extent to which parents interacting with typically- and atypically-developing toddlers (“gestural motherese”) in relation to the child’s developmental level. The third examines data relevant to a model of the developmental origins of the gesture-speech system in infant vocal-motor coordination; and the final line of work assesses whether atypicalities in infant vocal-motor development and coordination may provide an early index of eventual autism spectrum disorder diagnosis.
wednesday sept, 5th 2007
9:00h
contact
Jana Iverson
University of Pittsburgh
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 17
talk
wednesday sept, 5th 2007
10:00h
contact Sotaro Kita
School of Psychology, University of Birmingham [email protected]
Sotaro Kita
Speech accompanying gestures facilitate
conceptualization processes for speaking
When we speak, we often spontaneously produce gestures. There is evidence that suggest that gesturing facilitates speaking; however, the exact underlying mechanism for facilitation is
controversial. Some theories claim that gesture facilitates lexical access (e.g., access of the phonological forms) and others claim
that gesture facilitates conceptualization process (e.g., determining what to say in the utterance being planned). In this
presentation, I will review the studies on the link between speech production and gesture production. I argue that the most
parsimonious account of the findings is that gesture facilitates the conceptualisation process, rather than the formulation process.
4th International Workshop on Language Production 18
talk Jan Peter de Ruiter & Marijn Lamers
What I see is what you get; a heuristic illusion in human communication
In the human communication literature, there are conflicting findings about whether human communicators design their referring expressions 'egocentrically' (Keysar & colleagues) or that they do take into account the listeners perspective (Schegloff & Sacks' 'recipient design'). These contradictory findings can be reconciled by assuming that Recipient Design only activates under certain conditions. We therefore hypothesized that humans suffer from the "Illusion of Mutual Visibility" (IMV), which leads them to believe that when their interlocutor is co-present, and the object referred to is in the same room, that their interlocutor's field of vision is identical to their own. We used the Jast Construction Task platform (JCT) to test whether people do indeed suffer from this illusion, by manipulating the visibility of the pointing devices of both participants. We found strong evidence that speaker's referring behavior is guided by whether they themselves can see the listener's pointing device, instead of by whether the listener can actually see their own (the speaker's) pointing device. This provides strong evidence for the IMV.
wednesday sept, 5th 2007
11:15h
contact Jan Peter de Ruiter
MPI Nijmegen
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 19
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Sabrina Aristei
Department of Cognitive Science - University of Trento; University of Ulm [email protected]
Sabrina Aristei
Conditional naming: the locus of response decision revealed
by ERPs
In the Job and Tenconi study (2002), a dual task, conditional naming, did not produce behavioural costs compared to free
naming. In the present study we investigate when target and non-target during conditional picture naming (composed by
identification and categorization) diverge and whether living and non-living objects require extracting the same information to
perform response decision. EEG was recorded during spontaneous speech response. Differences between the two
categories are reflected in both RTs and ERPs. Both living and non living targets elicit an increased P3b with respect to non-
targets, although living target and non-targets diverge already during the N1 time window. These findings indicate that response
decision during conditional naming is based on information of different nature for livings and non livings. While for the former,
generic structural information is sufficient to trigger superordinate categorization, for non-livings, classification can be initiated only
extracting post-sensory information.
4th International Workshop on Language Production 20
poster
Phonological neighbors have been shown modulate phonetic properties of a word. Baese and Goldrick (submitted) demonstrate that voice onset time (VOT) varies according to lexical neighborhood structure. For example, the /k/ in 'cod' has a longer VOT than the /k/ in 'cop.' This reflects contrasting neighborhood structure: 'cod' has a highly similar neighbor 'god,' while 'cop' does not ('gop' is not an English word). The current experiment examines whether adding novel neighbors to the lexicon results in a similar modulation of phonetic properties of a word. Following Gaskell and Dumay (2003), we use a paradigm to train listeners on novel words. This paradigm has been shown to result in increased competition in speech perception between novel words and their existing neighbors. By analyzing speaker’s productions of words such as ‘cod’ and ‘cop’ before and after training, we will examine whether brief training results in lexically conditioned phonetic variation.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Melissa Baese
Northwestern University, Evanston
Melissa Baese, Tim Poepsel & Matt Goldrick
Moving new words into the neighbourhood
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 21
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Britta Biedermann Macquarie Centre for Cognitive Science [email protected]
Britta Biedermann
The representation of homophones in spoken word
production: Evidence from reading aloud
This study investigates whether homophones have a shared phonological word form representation (e.g., Levelt et al., 1999) or
independent representations (e.g., Caramazza et al., 2001). The evidence from the literature to date is contradictory, hence to
address this debate further we used a reading aloud paradigm. Low frequency irregular homophones (e.g., ‘thyme’) were matched
to low frequency irregular controls. The ‘shared representation’ account predicts that homophones are read faster than controls.
The ‘independent representation’ account predicts neither an advantage nor a disadvantage for homophones: Reading
performance should be governed by the homophone’s specific-word frequency instead. However, against the predictions above,
results revealed a homophone disadvantage. Our findings were replicated with an independent database of reading latencies
(Balota et al., 2002). Additionally, this study compares attempts to simulate the homophone disadvantage using three different
computational models of reading.
4th International Workshop on Language Production 22
poster Caroline Engstler & Matt Goldrick
Cross-language transfer as a gradient process
L2 research has typically viewed phonological processes as categorical. We instead propose that they can be gradient. We find that L1 final consonant devoicing is transferred to an L2, but not completely. Furthermore, we document that cross-linguistic lexical-level properties (i.e., cognate status) can trigger gradient phonological processes in an L2. English productions of final consonants by German-English bilinguals show that final devoicing is transferred from German to English. Furthermore, bilinguals' English productions fall between their German productions and monolingual English speakers' productions, suggesting a gradient transfer of the process to the L2. In addition, we found an influence of lexical status on final devoicing in the bilinguals' German productions. Cognates show a bigger voicing distinction than noncognates, suggesting that an L2 process ("express voicing distinction") can also be transferred gradiently to the L1. These results suggest that phonological processes can be gradient both within and across languages.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Caroline Engstler
Northwestern University, Evanston
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 23
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Julie Franck
University of Geneva
Julie Franck, Gabriela Soare, Luigi Rizzi & Ulrich H. Frauenfelder
The role of movement in object attraction in sentence
production
Recent research on attraction (verb agreement with an attractor noun other than the subject head) in French has shown attraction
in object relative clauses (e.g., *John speaks to the patients that the medicine cure) but not in the corresponding complement
clauses (e.g., *John says to the patients that the medicine cure) (Franck et al., 2007). Three experiments are reported that tease
apart the role, on attraction, of three structural properties specifically involved in relative clauses: (1) the object is part of the
argument structure of the agreeing verb, (2) object movement in preverbal position transits via an intermediate position intervening
on agreement, (3) this intermediate position is an agreement position in French (AgrO involved past participle agreement).
Results show that attraction is independent of argument structure and of agreement status. Rather, movement appears as a critical
condition, both necessary and sufficient, for attraction.
4th International Workshop on Language Production 24
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Eva Belke
University of Bielefeld
Lisa Gieselmann & Eva Belke
Investigating Top-Down Bias Effects in Lexical-Semantic Encoding
Evidence from neuroimaging suggests that working memory plays an important role in lexical access. According to one account, WM-capacities are required for the task-specific top-down modulation of lexical-semantic activation during lemma selection. We recently found that in a cyclic semantic blocking paradigm, semantic interference effects increase under high cognitive load relative to a no-load condition. In this paradigm, participants repeatedly name small sets of objects, potentially allowing for top-down bias effects to operate. If the increased interference effects we found under high cognitive load resulted from reduced capacities for top-down modulation, the interaction of semantic interference and WM-load effects should vanish when the task-specific potential for top-down modulation is reduced. This prediction was borne out in an experiment using a non-cyclic variant of the semantic blocking paradigm. We discuss this and related findings with regard to models of lexical access in language production.
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 25
poster
Ariel M. Goldberg, Joana Cholin, Jeremiah W. Bertz, Brenda Rapp & Michele Miozzo
Morpho-phonological processes in spoken
production: Evidence from aphasia
The interaction of morphology and phonology -morpho-phonology- is supported by the fact that the sound patterns of multi-
morphemic words may differ from those of mono-morphemic words and that phonological processes often make reference to
specific morphemes (e.g., in English, stem stress depends on the suffix: humídity, húmidness). We investigated the speech errors of
an aphasic individual (WRG) who appears to suffer from a morpho-phonological deficit that largely spares general
phonological processes. This sparing is indicated by nearly flawless repetition (97% phoneme accuracy). In contrast, in
elicitation and reading, WRG systematically repairs (simplifies) marked phonological structures: stress on adjacent syllables
(brísknèss->brisk/Id/ness), geminate consonants (ster/nn/ess->ster/n/ess), and clusters in multi-morphemic words (wal/kt/-
>walk/tId/). Furthermore, WRG produces phonological repairs more frequently in multi-morphemic than mono-morphemic
environments. WRG is a bi-lingual German/English speaker and exhibits similar behavior in both languages. WRG’s performance
provides evidence for morpho-phonological processes that are distinct from general phonological processes. His errors also
reveal properties of the phonological/prosodic word.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Ariel M. Goldberg
Cognitive Science Dept, Johns Hopkins University
4th International Workshop on Language Production 26
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Mireia Hernandez Pardo
Universitat de Barcelona
Mireia Hernandez Pardo & Albert Costa
Phonological encoding in L2 requires more central processing resources than in L1
We report two experiments assessing whether single word production in bilinguals’ second language (L2) entails a more effortful control processing (involving central processing resources) than word production in L1. To assess this issue, bilingual participants conducted a dual task interference paradigm, in which they had to perform a picture-naming task (Task 1) and a non-linguistic task (a tone-classification task - Task 2). The target pictures were presented along with semantically related, phonologically related or unrelated distractors. In Experiment 1 we asked a group of 50 Catalan-Spanish highly-proficient early bilinguals to perform the task in their dominant and first language (Catalan). Subsequently, in Experiment 2 a group of 50 Spanish-Catalan highly-proficient early bilinguals was asked to perform the same task in their non-dominant and second language (Catalan). As reported before (Ferreira & Pashler, 2002), semantic interference effects were observed in tone-discrimination times both when the task was conducted in participants’ L1 and L2. However, phonological facilitation effects in tone-discrimination times were only observed when the task was performed in L2. We argued that this latter contrasting effect indicates that, while the processes involved in phonological encoding do not seem to involve general processing resources when speaking in L1, they appear to do so when speaking in L2.
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 27
poster Gerrit Hirschfeld(1), Bernadette Jansma(2), Jens Bölte(1) & Pienie Zwitserlood(1)
PWI Electrified - Neural Correlates of Semantic
Interference and Facilitation
The interpretation of semantic inhibition (SI) in Picture-Word-Interference (PWI) as inhibition of all semantically related material
has recently been questioned. Here we report an experiment in which EEG was recorded to disentangle the processes involved
PWI. Distractors consisted of same-category words, surface-feature words, a row of XXXs or unrelated words. In line with previous
results, surface-features and XXXs facilitated naming, while category members slowed down naming compared to the
unrelated condition. The ERPs to picture onset showed that XXXs modulate both
Recognition Potential and N400. Surface-feature words seem to modulate components associated with object recognition, and to
reduce the N400. We found no reliable effects for category members.
We conclude that ERPs can be meaningfully related to processes in PWI. Further research is needed to relate these results to those
from comprehension research and from blocked naming, which showed effects for category members.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Gerrit Hirschfeld (1) University of Münster, (2) University of Maastricht [email protected]
4th International Workshop on Language Production 28
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Iva Ivanova
Universitat de Barcelona
Iva Ivanova & Albert Costa
Lexical alignment between L1 and L2 speakers
Do we adapt to the linguistic necessities of non-native speakers? Generally, speakers in dialogue mirror their language choices at many levels, which facilitates communication (so-called “alignment”: Pickering & Garrod, 2004). Importantly, alignment likely functions differently in L1-L2 than in L1-L1 conversations. Possibly, L1 speakers align more with L2 than with L1 speakers, to ensure understanding. However, the roles of L1 speakers’ beliefs about their interlocutors’ competence, and of the actual feedback they get, are unclear. To study these factors, we conducted a lexical alignment experiment disguised as a picture-matching game. We found that 1) without feedback, L1 speakers align more with L2 than with L1 speakers; and 2) when feedback indicates flawless comprehension, L1 speakers’ alignment is the same with both interlocutors. We conclude that alignment by L1 speakers is affected by beliefs about their interlocutors’ competence, but these can be rapidly updated in accordance with L2 interlocutors’ linguistic behaviour.
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 29
poster Niels Janssen
A Word-Order Constraint On Phonological Activation
In many languages, word-order rules impose major constraints on linguistic behavior. Despite their importance, little is known about
how these rules operate. We report an influence of word-order on the activation of phonological representations during language
production. Participants were presented with colored objects (e.g., blue rake), and named either the color (e.g., blue) or the object
(e.g., rake). The phonological onset similarity between color and object name was manipulated (e.g., red rake vs blue rake). In
Experiment 1, French speakers showed a phonological congruency effect in color but, surprisingly, not in object naming.
In Experiment 2, English speakers yielded the opposite pattern: A phonological congruency effect in object, but not in color naming.
Differences in the typical order of object nouns and color adjectives in French and English provide a plausible account for
the cross-linguistic contrast in phonological activation.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Niels Janssen
CNRS & Université de Provence [email protected]
4th International Workshop on Language Production 30
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Ina Jucks
Westfälische-Wilhelms-
Universität Münster
Ina Jucks
Choice of words as a recipient adapted activity?
Repeating a speech partner's expression and overlaps between interlocutors in their choice of words is an empirically well-confirmed phenomenon known as lexical entrainment. This paper looks at accounts for these overlaps in word use. The question addressed is in how far the word use of the addressee in comparison to available words from other sources has a special impact on experts’ choice of words. A laboratory experiment was conducted that addresses the applied field of online health advice. 80 advanced medical students responded to a fictitious patient inquiry via email. Results indicate that the mere availability of words (whether they were used by the addressee or not) accounts for experts’ word use. Nonetheless, an analysis of experts' reflections on the patient's knowledge also indicated a metacognitive awareness of the specific word choice of the addressee.
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 31
poster Dirk Koester
Morphological Priming in Speaking:
Evidence from ERPs
Morphological knowledge of words is essential for the production of complex words ("hand.appel" [eating apple], not "han.dappel";
dots=syllable boundaries). In German, the production of morphologically complex words facilitates the subsequent production of picture names that are part of the previously
produced complex words. These facilitative effects were interpreted as morphological priming. Previous studies in
language comprehension suggest that the N400 component reflects morphological processes. Here, a long-lag word-picture
priming design was employed to collect behavioural data in Experiment 1 and event-related potentials (ERPs) in Experiment
2. While behavioural priming effects confirmed previous results and extended these to Dutch, the production of morphologically
primed picture names was associated with a negativity in the N400 time window. These findings suggest a morphological processing component in speech production that cannot be
reduced to semantic or form processing. Furthermore, ERP effects related to morphological processes are not identical for production
and comprehension.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Dirk Koester
Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition [email protected]
4th International Workshop on Language Production 32
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Helene Kreysa
University of Edinburgh
Helene Kreysa, Manabu Arai, Sarah L. Haywood & Martin J. Pickering
Eye movements in Production: The eyes precede the mouth, but where, when and how?
We report results from a series of syntactic priming experiments, in which participants’ eye movements were tracked while they listened to a confederate’s description of a picture and subsequently described a similar stimulus themselves. The effect of priming on the eye movements has been reported elsewhere (e.g. Arai et al., CUNY 2007), but the data also allow us to draw more general conclusions with regard to the role of eye movements in language production. It is well-known that speakers look at objects in the order of their mention in a sentence, and that these gaze durations are affected by many factors. However, the eye-voice span, i.e. the time between the start of the last gaze to a to-be-mentioned entity and the onset of its name, seems to be less flexible. We discuss these and other measures and how they compare for comprehension and production tasks.
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 33
poster Jan-Rouke Kuipers
The limitations of cascading in the speech production
system
The view that activation flows freely through the mental lexicon has received support from the observation that ignored pictures can activate their phonological representations (e.g., Morcella &
Miozzo, 2002). In two experiments we examined whether all active concepts indeed activate their phonological representations. Using
colored pictures to name, we replicated Navarrete and Costa’s (2005) finding that when the pictures’ name is phonologically
related to the name of its color, the color naming task is facilitated compared to when the name of the picture is phonologically
unrelated. We also show that this effect is stronger when naming the picture is has been practiced. By contrast, the color’s name
has no effect on naming the picture, not even when color naming is practiced. The implications for the cascading view are
discussed.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Jan-Rouke Kuipers
Leiden University [email protected]
4th International Workshop on Language Production 34
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Marina Laganaro
Geneva University Hospitals,
Neurorehabilitation
Marina Laganaro
Tracking the time course of semantic and phonological encoding through the electro-physiological analysis of different anomic patterns in comparison with normal word production
In the present study, we analysed the electrophysiological correlates of anomia with underlying semantic or phonological impairment. EEG was recorded twice during a delayed picture naming task with 128 channels covering the entire scalp in 6 anomic speakers and in a control group of 15 healthy subjects. Waveform analysis and temporal segmentation were carried out on the control group and on each sub-group of anomic patients in comparison to the control group. A lexical frequency effect was observed in the healthy group with both analysis (waveform and temporal segmentation) in the time window between 300 and 330 ms after picture presentation. Abnormal electrocortical correlates were differently distributed in the aphasic sub-groups according to the underlying impairment. Patients with conduction aphasia and impaired phonological encoding had normal electro-cortical activity during the first 300 ms and abnormal patterns between 300 ms and 450 ms. Patients with semantic impairment had earlier ERP abnormalities starting immediately after visual processes. The abnormal electrocortical correlates observed in these two different anomic profiles seem to correspond to the time windows of the impaired encoding processes and allows an estimation of the time course of semantic processes (before 300 ms) and phonological encoding (from approximately 300 ms to 450 ms).
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 35
poster Antje Lorenz, Judith Heide, Juliane Hübner, Ria De Bleser & Frank Burchert
Production of nominal compounds in aphasia
There is an ongoing debate about how polymorphemic words are represented and processed. While most of the current evidence
points to (de-)composition of the full form into its morphemic parts (Dohmes et al., 2004), other authors argue for a holistic retrieval
process, at least when considering the production of nominal compounds (Janssen et al., submitted). Furthermore, some
studies have shown that certain factors such as semantic transparency and frequency of the polymorphemic target may
have an impact on type of processing (Blanken, 2000). This study investigates the processing of nominal compounds in a
case series of German adults with aphasia and phonological or deep dyslexia. Each patient participates in a task of spoken
picture naming and reading aloud. Specific effects of full form and morpheme frequency, semantic transparency, and word type of
left constituent of the compounds were examined. The results support theories of (de-)composition.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Antje Lorenz
Institut für Linguistik, Universität Potsdam
4th International Workshop on Language Production 36
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Ansgar Hantsch
University of Leipzig
Andreas Mädebach, Ansgar Hantsch & Jörg D. Jescheniak
Naming vs. categorization: Semantic relatedness and task instruction interact in the picture-word interference paradigm
Depending on the task (naming vs. categorization) opposing semantic effects have been obtained in the picture-word interference paradigm (i.e., interference vs. facilitation). However, in most studies task-instruction and naming-level were confounded (basic-level naming vs. superordinate-level categorization). In two experiments we thus investigated whether the task instruction modulates semantic effects if the target’s level of abstraction is held constant. Participants produced basic-level names (e.g., “flower”) and ignored distractor words denoting the pictures’ subordinate-level names (e.g., “rose”). Experiments only differed in details of their study/practice phase and the instruction. In Experiment 1, participants were familiarized with the pictures’ basic-level names, and received a naming instruction. In Experiment 2, participants were familiarized with the pictures’ subordinate-level names and received a categorization-instruction. Interference was obtained for the naming task while facilitation was obtained for the categorization task, indicating that the facilitation effect in categorization is in fact due to the task instruction.
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 37
poster Alissa Melinger & Anne Schwartz
Eyetracking supports a phonological (but not a
phonetic) component to the cognate facilitation effect.
Bilingual speakers name pictures faster when the name of the picture is phonologically similar in the speaker’s two languages
(cognates) than when they are phonologically dissimilar (non-cognates; Costa, Caramazza, & Sebastian-Galles, 2000). This cognate facilitation effect has been attributed to a phonological
level of encoding; however, a phonetic component is suggested given findings of cascading activation between phonological
planning and phonetic processes (Goldrick & Blumstein, 2006). Since participants fixate objects throughout phonological encoding but look away before speaking, eyetracking can be used to isolate independent contributions of phonological and phonetic encoding (e.g. Meyer & van der Meulen, 2000). German/French bilinguals
named pairs of common objects while their eye-movements were recorded. We tested whether the interval between fixation offset and speech onset was shorter for cognate pictures than for non-cognate pictures. The results confirm a phonological contribution
but do not support a phonetic contribution.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Alissa Melinger
School of Psychology, University of Dundee [email protected]
4th International Workshop on Language Production 38
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Susannah Moat
(1) University of Edinburgh / (2) Ghent University
Susannah Moat(1, 2), Robert J. Hartsuiker(2) & Martin Corley(1)
Cascading from phonological encoding to articulation? A computational investigation
Many studies suggest there is cascading of activation from non-selected representations at the word selection stage to the phonological encoding stage (e.g., Peterson & Savoy, 1998). But what about the interface between phonological encoding and later articulatory processes? Goldrick and Blumstein (2006) demonstrated in a tongue twister task that /k/s errorfully produced as /g/s had a longer voice-onset time (VOT) than correctly produced /g/s. Errors therefore reflect traces of their intended targets. Goldrick and Blumstein argued that this was evidence for activation from non-selected target phonemes cascading into articulation. We outline two ways in which a model without cascading from phonological encoding to articulation may also be able to account for this evidence, and use a small computational model to investigate these ideas further. Initial simulations imply that, contrary to Goldrick and Blumstein's (2006) suggestions, certain parameterisations of non-cascading models do indeed display traces of intended targets on speech errors.
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 39
poster Frank Oppermann(1), Jörg D. Jescheniak(1), Herbert Schriefers(2)
Conceptual coherence affects phonological activation of
context objects during object naming
Whether the not-to-be-named context object is processed up to a
phonological level during speech planning is a question of continuing debate. While some studies presented evidence in
favour of such a view (e.g., Morsella & Miozzo, 2002; Navarrete & Costa, 2005; Meyer & Damian, in press), other studies failed to do so (e.g., Bloem & La Heij, 2003; Bloem et al., 2004; Jescheniak et
al., 2007). In a series of four picture word interference experiments containing a target and a context object, we demonstrate that
phonological activation of context objects is reliably observed if target and context object are embedded in a conceptually
coherent scene and that this activation disappears if both objects are presented in arrays of arbitrary objects. This pattern suggests
that details of the visual input, in particular its conceptual coherence, have important consequences for the lexical
processing of not-to-be named context objects.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Frank Oppermann
(1) University of Leipzig, (2) Radboud University Nijmegen
4th International Workshop on Language Production 40
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Katharina Spalek
University of Bristol
Katharina Spalek & Markus F. Damian
Limited attentional resources affect semantic facilitation effects in object naming
Most language production models assume that activation automatically spreads to semantic competitors of a target word. Two experiments investigated whether this automaticity assumption still holds when speakers’ attention is drawn away from the naming task. Experiment 1 established a baseline semantic effect. Participants named a series of pictures; on a subset of these, consecutive pictures were either semantically related (e.g., prime – target: grapes – apple) or unrelated (helicopter – apple). We found a facilitation effect on naming latencies for target objects in the related condition. In Experiment 2, participants named the same critical prime-target pictures, but on a portion of the interleaved non-critical trials, they performed a phoneme monitoring task on the object names. In this experiment, the semantic facilitation effect vanished. We are currently investigating if it was the mere presence of a secondary task, or rather its nature (attending to word form properties) that caused the semantic effect to disappear.
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 41
poster Kristof Strijkers & Albert Costa
An ERP study of word frequency and cognates in
speech production
The word frequency effect and the cognate facilitation effect are two phenomena, which influence naming latencies during speech
production. Up to know it is unclear at which processing stage during speech production these effects arises. Knowledge about
the locus in time of the frequency and cognate effect can enlarge our understanding of both phenomena and is of great importance for constraining speech production models. An ERP study with 14
Spanish-Catalan bilinguals performing a picture naming task in Spanish was conducted. Behavioural results show a clear
frequency effect and interaction between frequency and cognate status. In the ERPs high frequency items start to disperse around
150ms post target presentation from low frequency items and continue to disperse until the end of the epoch. Identical results
are found when comparing the ERPs between cognates and non-cognates. The results of the present study clearly offer
electrophysiological evidence for an early influence of frequency and cognate status in the speech production process.
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Kristof Strijkers
Universitat de Barcelona [email protected]
4th International Workshop on Language Production 42
poster
monday sept, 3rd 2007
15:45h - 18:00h
contact Rinus Verdonschot
Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition
R.Verdonschot @let.leidenuniv.nl
Rinus Verdonschot, Wido La Heij & Niels O. Schiller
Facilitation from verb distractors on picture naming: Is it due to response-relevant criteria?
Mahon, Costa, Peterson and Caramazza (JEP: LMC, 2007) recently investigated, among other things, the role of response-relevant criteria (RRC) in English language production. Using the picture-word interference paradigm, they compared the effects of semantically related (e.g. chair) vs. unrelated (e.g. rifle) distractor nouns with semantically related (e.g. sleep) vs. unrelated (e.g. shoot) distractor verbs on picture (e.g. BED) naming latencies. Their results demonstrated interference from semantically related nouns, but facilitation from verbs. Mahon et al. suggested that the language production system may discard distractor verbs as competitors more easily because they do not fulfill the RRC (i.e. produce a noun phrase). We would like to argue, however, that sleep may have a unique relationship with BED, and that the observed facilitation may arise due to the way uniquely related nouns and verbs are cognitively represented. In the present Dutch study, we attempted to empirically support our hypothesis by contrasting the effects of uniquely (e.g. slapen ‘to sleep’; as Mahon et al. did) and non-uniquely (though semantically) related verb distractors (e.g. zitten ‘to sit’) on picture (e.g. BED) naming latencies. We were unable to replicate the facilitation effect for uniquely related verb distractors but found significant facilitation for non-uniquely related verb distractors.
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 43
eat out
AMERICA LATINA Neubrückenstr. 50-52
South-American food, lunch offers (e.g. hamburgers or tortillas) starting at 4.00 €
BUTTERHANDLUNG HOLSTEIN Ludgeristr. 100
Famous deli in Münster, located at the center of the “Münster-Arkaden”; fresh specialities, salads, antipasti or ciabattas served
CHINA-CORNER Salzstr.52
Asian snack-bar with a choice of fried rice/ noodles, chop suey and several meat-dishes, vegetarians variants; also take-away; quickly served, meals between 3.50 € and 6.00 €
FLOYD CAFÉ LOUNGE Domplatz 6-7
Italian coffee-specialities, smoothies and snacks (bagels, focaccias); vis-à-vis to the Münster cathedral
GROSSER KIEPENKERL Spiekerhof 45
German cuisine with authentic Westfalian dishes, famous location and an attraction for Münster visitors
KAUFHOF FOOD-MALL Ludgeristr.1
In the basement of the department store „Galeria Kaufhof“; different food stations (e.g. Chinese, Japanese, Italian or German + a juice bar, a coffee bar and a bakery)
KLEINER KIEPENKERL Spiekerhof 47
Regionally inspired cuisine, next to the “Grosser Kiepenkerl”
LAZARETTI Spiekerhof 26
Italian specialities, great variety of home-made ice cream and cakes, nice ambience
MARKTCAFÉ Domplatz 6-7
Lunch with pasta-buffet and a choice of small dishes (“Flämmküchle”, pizza, salads, etc.), vis-à-vis to the Münster cathedral
METZGEREI SCHARUN Spiekerhof 29
Tasty German meat-dishes prepared with organic meat in the butcher’s shop (e.g. meatballs or pork chops), quickly served at bistro tables
MOCCA D’OR Rothenburg 14-16
Lunch offer (from 12 pm on): pizza or salad + Italian coffee for 8.50 Euro; choice of daily dishes (soups, salads, antipasti); very tasty pizza (perhaps the best in town)
Lunch
4th International Workshop on Language Production 44
eat out
MONEGRO Frauenstr. 51-52
Mongolian Barbecue from 6.50 to 14.50 €; the guest can make a choice of fresh ingredients for his dish, which is then prepared in a Mongolian BBQ style
PINKUS IM STADTHAUS 1 Klemensstr. 10
Lunch-offer (11:30 am – 2:30 pm): dish of the day + 0.2l sparkling water for 5.40 Euro; a popular address for business lunch
RESTAURANT-CAFÉ PABLO Ludgeristr. 100
Lunch and daily specials, café in the „Münster-Arkaden next to the entrance of the Picasso-museum
RICK’S CAFÉ Aegidiistr.56
Daily offers of Italian, French and Tex-Mex-cuisine, approx. 8.00 €
VAPIANO Königsstr. 51-53
Trend restaurant with a large variety of salads, antipasti, pasta-dishes, pizza and coffee-bar; self-service at different cooking stations
FIU - SPEZIALITÁ ALLA GRIGLIA, Rothenburg 14-20, 0251/4 84 4 95
Italian-styled grilled meat- and fish-dishes; reservation recommended; located directly in the city centre
L’OSTARIA PASTA È BASTA, Neubrückenstr. 35-37, 0251/4 42 94
30 different sorts of home-made pasta, meat- and fish-dishes
LA LOCANDA Frauenstr. 32 0251/5 55 77
Small Italian restaurant close to the Hindenburgplatz in the city centre serving typical Italian food
LAGUNA BLU Steinfurter Str. 104 0251/27 45 21
Antipasti, fish- and meat-dishes, home-made pasta & pizza
MOCCA D’OR Rothenburg 14-16 0251/4 82 85 91
Probably the best pizza in town, creative salads and soups, dolci; reservation strongly recommended
Dinner // Italian style
VILLA MEDICI Ostmarkstr. 15 0251/3 42 18
Awarded as the best Italian restaurant in Nordrhein-Westfalen in 2005; exclusive Italian cuisine
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 45
eat out
DELHI Gartenstr. 51 0251/23 23 00
Typical Indian cuisine with fish-, lamb- and chicken-dishes, Tandooris, Naan-bread, etc.
MONEGRO Frauenstr. 51-52 0251/4 14 55 61
Mongolian Barbecue from 6,50 to 14,50 € (all-you-can-eat variant); the guest makes a choice of fresh ingredients for his dish which is afterwards freshly prepared in a Mongolian style
PHAM’S RESTAURANT BAR, Stiftsherrenstr. 19 0251/4 84 22 08
South-east Asian cuisine and specialities grilled on a lava stone; very tasty choice of food, reservation recommended
TAJ MAHAL Bahnhofstr. 64 0251/51 99 85
Authentic Indian food with Tandoor-specialities, food is eaten in a traditional manner on the floor
TAKANOHA Königsstr. 45 0251/5 10 53 29
Sushi and hot dishes
AMERICA LATINA Neubrückenstr. 50-52 0251/5 56 66
Mexican food, steaks, hamburgers, salad-buffet, cocktails
ENCHILADA Arztkarrengasse 12 0251/4 55 66
Tex-Mex-restaurant and Cocktail bar
LA CORRIDA Alter Steinweg 32 0251/9 79 59 78
Spanish specialities (Tapas, Paella, etc.), Cocktails
PIER HOUSE Hafenweg 22 0251/8 99 79 99
South-American cuisine with a choice of wraps, tortilla dishes, steaks and hamburgers; Cuban-styled ambience with view on the Münster industrial harbour
Dinner // Asian style
Dinner // South-American/Spanish style
4th International Workshop on Language Production 46
eat out
DINING.HOF Grevener Str. 91 0251/2 39 07 67
Crossover cuisine
HEAVEN - RESTAURANT & LOUNGE, Hafenweg 31 01 63/ 8 91 32 98
Mix of German, Thai and Mediterranean cuisine; very nice lounge atmosphere; located in the harbour-district in a former factory hall
MEYER’S Kampstr. 26 0251/27 47 00
Food offer covers bar-snacks as well as tasty main-dishes; located in the “Kreuz-Viertel”
MÖVENPICK RESTAURANT Kardinal-von-Galen-Ring 65
Different Buffets and à-la-carte; main dishes between 8.00 and 19.00 €
PRÜTT-CAFÉ Bremer Str. 32 0251/66 55 88
Vegetarian restaurant offering organic whole food dishes with a Mediterranean touch
Dinner // Crossover style
LUV & LEE Hafenweg 46-48 0251/6 18 96 18
Coffee bar and restaurant located in the harbour-district
GROSSER KIEPENKERL Spiekerhof 45 0251/4 03 35
Authentic Westphalian dishes between 4,50 and 20,00 Euro; traditional interior with painted tiles on the walls and historical decorations; closed on Tuesdays
KLEINER KIEPENKERL Spiekerhof 47 0251/4 34 16
Regionally inspired cuisine, closed on Mondays
PINKUS MÜLLER ALTBIERKÜCHE Kreuzstraße 4-10
Münster’s famous beer brewery serving the typical “Altbier“; Westphalian dishes for 10.00-22.00 €
STUHLMACHER Prinzipalmarkt 6-7 0251/4 48 77
Regional cuisine located next to the famous “Friedenssaal”
Dinner // Westfalian/German style
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 47
BAR-ZILLUS Jüdefelder Str. 41
Typical student-bar, Happy-Hour, usually very crowdy; located in the Jüdefelder street, which is famous for its bars and pubs
CAVETE Kreuzstr. 37-38
The oldest student-pub in Münster serving beer and cocktails, as well as small dishes; interesting/ peculiar interior; located in the “Kuhviertel”, where a lot of bars and pubs are located
FRAUENSTRASSE 24 Frauenstr. 24
Pub for the alternative student-scene serving Turkish food
HAVANA Münzstr.49/ Ecke Jüdefelder
Cocktails, beer & Tex-Mex-food
UFERLOS Bismarckallee 5-11
Bar belonging to the „Studentenwerk Münster“ located at the “Aasee” next to the Mensa
BOMBAY SAFARIBAR Hansaring, Ecke Soester Str.
Bar and cocktail lounge in the look of the 70’s
COCO LOCO Hindenburgplatz 20
Cocktails and Mexican food, special choice of tequilas
CUBANOVA Achtermannstr. 10-12
Cocktails, wine & beer, Mediterranean food, every Tuesday salsa-party
HAIFISCHBAR Mauritzstr.19
Surf-Bar with a great choice of cocktails and surf-music of the 60’s
MILCH UND HONIGLOUNGE Alter Steinweg 37
Trendy lounge with cocktails and small snacks located in the city centre of Münster
BLECHTROMMEL Hansaring 26-28
Beer and food, table football & billiard
Bars // Pubs // Lounges // Clubs
drinks
4th International Workshop on Language Production 48
KRUSE BAIMKEN Am Stadtgraben 52 (am Aasee)
Large beer garden, German and international food; located at the “Aasee“
MEYER’S Kampstr. 26
Beer at the center of the „Kreuz-Viertel“ in a nice atmosphere and with good food served
SCHLOSSGARTEN Schlossgarten 4
Café, bar and restaurant at the heart of the „Schlossgarten“ (the park surrounding the Münster castle)
KLUP Königsstr. 45
Happy hour from 10pm-12am, get two Becks, pay one
HEAVEN Hafenweg. 31
Big-Size-Club-Restaurant
GO-GO Wolbeckerstr. 1
Music-lounge, Happy hour every day between 10pm and 1am (beer: pay one, get one free)
LUNA BAR Hammer Str. 35
Former brothel with 70’s flair; live DJs, concerts and readings
Bars // Pubs // Lounges // Clubs
drinks
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 49
Abdel Rahman, Rasha [email protected] 10 Biologische Psychologie/ Psychophysiologie Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany
Cholin, Joana [email protected] 9 Department of Cognitive Science Johns Hopkins University, USA
Damian, Markus [email protected] 8 Department of Experimental Psychology University of Bristol, United Kingdom
de Ruiter, Jan Peter [email protected] 18 MPI Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Iverson, Jana [email protected] 16 Department of Psychology University of Pittsburgh, USA
Jansma, Bernadette [email protected] 7 Department of Cognitive Neuroscience University of Maastricht, The Netherland
Kello, Christopher [email protected] 15 Department of Psychology, George Mason University, USA
Kempen, Gerard [email protected] 11 MPI Nijmegen & Cognitive Psychology Unit, Leiden University, The Netherlands
Kita, Sotaro [email protected] 17 School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
Kroll, Judith F. [email protected] 14 Department of Psychology Pennsylvania State University, USA
Maassen, Ben [email protected] 12 Medical Psychology, Pediatric Neurology Center, ENT, Radboud University, The Netherlands
Semenza, Carlo [email protected] 6 Department of Psychology, University of Trieste, Italy
Ziegler, Wolfram [email protected] 13 EKN – Clinical Neuropsychology Research Group München, Germany
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Speakers
4th International Workshop on Language Production 50
Aristei, Sabrina [email protected] 19 University of Trento, Italy University of Ulm, Germany
Baese, Melissa [email protected] 20 Northwestern University, Evanston, USA
Belke, Eva [email protected] 24 Universität Bielefeld
Biedermann, Britta [email protected] 21 Macquarie Centre for Cognitive Science Sydney, Australia
Engstler, Caroline [email protected] 22 Northwestern University, Evanston, USA
Franck, Julie [email protected] 23 University of Geneva, Switzerland
Goldberg, Ariel M. [email protected] 25 Cognitive Science Department Johns Hopkins University, USA
Hantsch, Ansgar [email protected] 36 University of Leipzig, Germany
Hernandez Pardo, Mireia [email protected] 26 Universitat de Barcelona, Spain
Hirschfeld, Gerrit [email protected] 27 University of Münster
Ivanova, Iva [email protected] 28 Universitat de Barcelona, Spain
Janssen, Niels [email protected] 29 CNRS & Université de Provence, France
Jucks, Ina [email protected] 30 Department for Educational Psychology Westfälische-Wilhelms-Universität, Münster, Germany
Koester, Dirk [email protected] 31 Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition Leiden, The Netherlands
Kreysa, Helene [email protected] 32 University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Kuipers, Jan-Rouke [email protected] 33 Leiden University, The Netherlands
posters
index
September, 3rd - 5th, Münster, Gemany 51
Laganaro, Marina [email protected] 34 Geneva University Hospitals, Neurorehabilitation, Geneve, Switzerland
Lorenz, Antje [email protected] 35 Institut für Linguistik Universität Potsdam, Germany
Melinger, Alissa [email protected] 37 School of Psychology University of Dundee, United Kingdom
Moat, Susannah [email protected] 38 University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom University of Ghent, Belgium
Oppermann, Frank [email protected] 39 University of Leipzig, Germany
Spalek, Katharina [email protected] 40 Department of Experimental Psychology University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom
Strijkers, Kristof [email protected] 41 Universitat de Barcelona, Spain
Verdonschot, Rinus [email protected] 42 Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition
index