Santa Crucians at AMLaP 30
In September, the 30th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing (AMLaP) conference took place at the University of Edinburgh, with many current and former students and faculty of the Department presenting posters or talks:
- Linguistic boundaries delineate contextual domains in memory
Lalitha Balachandran and Matt Wagers -
Beyond the left hemisphere: MEG evidence for right temporal lobe recruitment in Bangla morphosyntax processing
Dustin Chacón, with Swarnendu Moitra and Linnaea Stockall -
Breaking down inflected words and putting the pieces back together involve the left occipitotemporal and orbitofrontal regions: MEG evidence from Tagalog
Dustin Chacón, with Dave Kenneth Cayado, Samantha Wray, Marco Chia-Ho Lai, Suhail Matar, and Linnaea Stockall - Processing covert dependencies: A study on Turkish wh-in-situ
Duygu Demiray (University of Massachusetts, Amherst) and Matt Wagers - Effects of foil processing, decision-making, and initial attention in the Maze task
Jack Duff (Saarland University), Pranav Anand, and Amanda Rysling - Deprioritizing linguistic material: The role of givenness on focus and filler-gap processing
Morwenna Hoeks (University of Osnabrück), Maziar Toosarvandani, and Amanda Rysling - Linguistic boundaries reduce encoding interference in temporal order memory
Stephanie Rich (Concordia University), Lalitha Balachandran, and Matt Wagers - Animacy and long-distance pronominal anaphora in discourse: Evidence from the Maze
Kelsey Sasaki (Oxford University), Pranav Anand, Amanda Rysling - Subject islands are not caused by information structure clashes: evidence from topicalization
Niko Webster, Matthew Kogan, Mandy Cartner (Tel Aviv University), Matt Wagers, and Ivy Sichel