Committee |
Date Time |
Place |
Paper Title / Authors |
Abstract |
Paper # |
TL |
2014-08-12 10:00 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Parsing of Ambiguous Relative Clauses in Japanese
-- An Event-related Potentials Study -- Chunhua Bai, Yuki Kobayashi, Yuki Hirose (Univ. of Tokyo) TL2014-12 |
Previous studies of Japanese relative clause association suggest that the parser first interprets the RC as modifying th... [more] |
TL2014-12 pp.1-6 |
TL |
2014-08-12 10:30 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Children's comprehension of the syntactic marker
-- A study of Japanese case marker ga, wo -- Akiko Zhao Chou, Luo Yingyi, Hiromu Sakai (Hiroshima Univ.) TL2014-13 |
In this study we investigated how Japanese children acquire the syntactic case markers in their native language, i.e., g... [more] |
TL2014-13 pp.7-12 |
TL |
2014-08-12 11:00 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Crowdsourcing surveys for research purposes
-- Lancers as a case study -- Ryosuke Kohita, Edson T. Miyamoto (Univ. of Tsukuba) TL2014-14 |
Traditional questionnaire surveys tend to be constrained by logistic difficulties, and the data collected is often limit... [more] |
TL2014-14 pp.13-18 |
TL |
2014-08-12 11:45 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Readers with less cognitive control are more affected by surprising content: Evidence from a self-paced reading experiment in German Bruno Nicenboim, Shravan Vasishth, Reinhold Kliegl (Univ. of Potsdam) TL2014-23 |
A mechanism of predictions for language implies that the parser has to build up potential upcoming continuations and the... [more] |
TL2014-23 pp.67-71 |
TL |
2014-08-12 12:15 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Eye Movements During the Processing of Pronominal Relative Clauses by Native and Non-native Speakers of English Douglas Roland, Yuki Hirose (Univ. of Tokyo), Gail Mauner (Univ. at Buffalo), Stephanie Foraker (Buffalo State College) TL2014-15 |
Previous research has shown that object relative clauses are typically more difficult to process than analogous subject ... [more] |
TL2014-15 pp.19-24 |
TL |
2014-08-12 13:45 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Reanalyzed antecedents in German sluicing Dario Paape (Univ. of Potsdam) TL2014-16 |
The current study investigated the real-time processing of German sluicing constructions with temporarily ambiguous ante... [more] |
TL2014-16 pp.25-29 |
TL |
2014-08-12 14:15 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Recursion in syntactic processing in Spanish Sergio Mota, Jose Manuel Igoa (Univ. Autonoma de Madrid) TL2014-17 |
Recursion is thought to be an essential property of language. However, the notion of recursion and its role in language ... [more] |
TL2014-17 pp.31-36 |
TL |
2014-08-12 14:45 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Real-time Grammar Processing by Late Second Language Speakers
-- An Eye-tracking Study -- Yuichi Suzuki, Yi Ting Huang (Univ. of Maryland) TL2014-18 |
The current study investigated whether late L2 English speakers could achieve real-time sentence processing. We focused ... [more] |
TL2014-18 pp.37-42 |
TL |
2014-08-12 15:30 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
The learning of an A^2 B^2 artificial grammar by adults and children in a go/no-go paradigm Shiro Ojima (Univ. of Tokyo/Shiga Univ.), Kazuo Okanoya (Univ. of Tokyo) TL2014-19 |
(Advance abstract in Japanese is available) [more] |
TL2014-19 pp.43-48 |
TL |
2014-08-12 16:00 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Acquisition of Prosodic Focus Marking by Japanese ESL Learners Atsushi Fujimori (Shizuoka Univ.), Noriko Yoshimura (Univ. of Shizuoka), Tomohiko Shirahata (Shizuoka Univ.) TL2014-20 |
This study investigates whether Japanese ESL learners can acquire English prosodic focus marking. Our experimental resul... [more] |
TL2014-20 pp.49-53 |
TL |
2014-08-12 16:30 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Acceptability of Japanese-English Intrasentential Code-Switching by Bilinguals and Monolinguals
-- A comparison of switching of head and phrase -- Junna Yoshida (Univ. of Tsukuba) TL2014-21 |
This research compares Japanese monolinguals and Japanese-English bilinguals in terms of their acceptability of Japanese... [more] |
TL2014-21 pp.55-59 |
TL |
2014-08-12 17:15 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Aspect and Event Type df Japanese Verbs
-- From the Point of View of Speakers' Event Recognition -- Hideki Chosa, Ayaka Tamura, Hiromu Sakai (Hiroshima Univ.) TL2014-22 |
Although there are a lot of studies, which classify event aspects based on a verb classification, there are not so many ... [more] |
TL2014-22 pp.61-65 |
TL |
2014-08-12 17:15 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Processing subject and object relative clauses with numeral classifiers in Japanese Baris Kahraman (Univ. of Tokyo/JSPS), Kei Tanigawa, Yuki Hirose (Univ. of Tokyo) TL2014-24 |
In this study, using a self-paced reading task and sentence fragment completion task, we investigated the influence of m... [more] |
TL2014-24 pp.73-78 |
TL |
2014-08-12 17:15 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
The way of learning from the Japanese sentences which include topic marker "wa" or subject marker "ga"
-- The function of Japanese particles topic marker "wa" and subject marker "ga" -- Kazuhisa Okayasu (Shonan High Sch.) TL2014-25 |
Abstract Japanese has topic marker wa and a subject marker ga. The sentence which includes one of these particles is w... [more] |
TL2014-25 pp.79-82 |
TL |
2014-08-12 17:15 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
The Digital Linguistics: An Interdisciplinary Hypothesis for Neural Mechanism of Grammatical Demodulation
-- Syllabic Addition and Modification of Grammars are Translated into Meanings at Brainstem Auditory Nuclei -- Kimiaki Tokumaru TL2014-26 |
To date, the origin and the mechanism of human language has never been clarified, because it is an interdisciplinary and... [more] |
TL2014-26 pp.83-88 |
TL |
2014-08-12 17:15 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
[Poster Presentation]
Contextual Influence on Ambiguity Resolution for Relative-Clause Attachment by Chinese Leaners of Japanese
-- L2 Japanese in the Sentence Completion Paradigm -- Jiaohui Shen, Yoko Nakano, Yu Ikemoto (KGU) TL2014-27 |
(Advance abstract in Japanese is available) [more] |
TL2014-27 pp.89-93 |
TL |
2014-08-13 10:00 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
[Tutorial Lecture]
Fitting linear mixed models using JAGS and Stan: A tutorial Shravan Vasishth, Tanner Sorensen (Univ. of Potsdam) TL2014-28 |
Psycholinguists routinely use linear mixed models (LMMs) for statistical inference. The most widely used tool for this p... [more] |
TL2014-28 pp.95-96 |
TL |
2014-08-13 11:10 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
[Invited Talk]
Neural models of language production Franklin Chang (Univ. of Liverpool) TL2014-29 |
[more] |
TL2014-29 pp.97-100 |
TL |
2014-08-13 13:00 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
An ERP study of parsing and memory load in Japanese sentence processing
-- A comparison between left-corner parsing and the Dependency Locality Theory -- Shodai Uchida (Univ. of Tokyo), Edson T. Miyamoto (Univ. of Tsukuba), Yuki Hirose, Yuki Kobayashi, Takane Ito (Univ. of Tokyo) TL2014-30 |
We report event-related potentials to long locative adjuncts following different types of NPs. First, when the adjunct f... [more] |
TL2014-30 pp.101-106 |
TL |
2014-08-13 13:30 |
Tokyo |
The University of Tokyo (Komaba) 18 Bldg. Hall |
Facilitatory and inhibitory effects of thematic fit in ambiguity resolution Manabu Arai, Chie Nakamura, Yuki Hirose (Univ. of Tokyo) TL2014-31 |
(Advance abstract in Japanese is available) [more] |
TL2014-31 pp.107-112 |