(2) The role of information structure in anaphora resolution. Saveria Colonna, Sarah Schimke, Barbara Hemforth, Lars Konieczny, & Joël Pynte.
(3) Active search for clitic pronouns in Galician long-distance dependencies. Leticia Pablos, Colin Phillips, & Juan Uriagereka.
(5) Interference of discourse topics with the resolution of verbal/event anaphors. Barbara Hemforth, Edward Gibson, Timothy Desmet, Florian Wolf, & Emmanuel Bellengier.
(6) The effect of lexical vs. stereotypical gender on the time-course of reference resolution: evidence from eye-movement. Hamutal Kreiner, Patrick Sturt, & Simon Garrod.
(7) Incremental anaphora resolution in Korean: Evidence from early gender mismatch. Jieun Kiaer.
(8) Grammatical role and position parallelism in pronoun resolution: A visual world eye-tracking study. Juhani Järvikivi, Roger P. G. van Gompel, Jukka Hyönä, & Raymond Bertram.
(9) A gender, a determiner or yet another congruency effect? Evidence from Czech. Denisa Bordag & Thomas Pechmann.
(10) Differences in L1 and L2 gender processing: The role of noun termination. Denisa Bordag, Andreas Opitz, & Thomas Pechmann.
(11) When is gender information activated in role-name processing?. Lisa Irmen.
(12) Explaining the gender effect in spoken-word recognition: Evidence of L1 interference during L2 lexical competition. Garance Paris & Andrea Weber.
(13) Verbal short-term memory from a language processing point of view: Is grammatical gender relevant in memory?. J. Schweppe & R. Rummer.
(15) A fine-grained information-theoretical model of processing inflectional morphology. Fermin Moscoso del Prado Martin, & Aleksandar Kostic.
(16) Exemplar effects in Dutch plural and past tense inflection. Emmanuel Keuleers & Dominiek Sandra.
(17) Morphological processing in French L1 and L2 children. Marie Labelle.
(18) Immediate use of intonational cues in a discourse-based visual search task. Kiwako Ito & Shari Speer.
(19) The relation of prosody and syntax during speech processing: Two ERP studies. Korinna Eckstein & Angela D. Friederici.
(20) Stable attractors in intonation: Evidence for discrete choices in English prosody. B. Braun, G. Kochanski, E. Grabe, & B. S. Rosner.
(21) Naïve speakers spontaneously produce prosodic cues that constrain the syntactic analysis of spoken sentences. Séverine Millotte & Anne Christophe.
(22) Disguised prosodic cues for syntax. Yuki Hirose.
(23) Prosody and informativeness can work together: RC-attachment in Russian. Igor Yanovich & Olga Fedorova.
(24) The interface between emotional prosodic and syntactic processes: An ERP study. Sonja Fleischhauer, Sonja A. Kotz, & Kai Alter.
(25) Competition during syntactic ambiguity resolution: A late, strategic process. Roger P. G. van Gompel, Jamie Pearson, Martin J. Pickering, & Manabu Arai.
(26) The role of L1 verb bias on L2 sentence comprehension. Paola E. Dussias & Tracy Cramer.
(27) The processing of subject specificity in sentence comprehension: Evidence from event-related brain potentials. Manfred F. Gugler, Sonja Rossi, Angela D. Friederici, & Anja Hahne.
(28) Hyperactive verbs: Unraveling the factors that influence the activation pattern of verbs during on-line sentence processing. Dieuwke de Goede & Roelien Bastiaanse.
(29) In defense of competition in syntactic ambiguity resolution. Theo Vosse & Gerard Kempen.
(30) How many DPs? - On the Internal Processing of Determiner Phrases. Jana Häussler & Markus Bader.
(31) Real-time facilitation effects in temporarily ambiguous sentences. Helen East.
(32) Neuromagnetic correlates of syntactic processing. Tineke M. Snijders, Ole Jensen, & Peter Hagoort.
(33) The kindergarten-path effect revisited: Children's use of context in processing structural ambiguities. Anna R. Weighall & Michelle Thompson.
(34) On the task-dependence of gaze behavior in visual worlds. Juliane Steinberg.
(36) World-knowledge and frequency in resolving number ambiguities. Markus Bader & Jana Häussler.
(37) Gradience in syntactic violations: The role of fine grained constraints. Philippe Blache, Christel Portes, Barbara Hemforth, & Emmanuel Bellengier.
(38) Length effects in PP-attachment. Caterina Petrone, Saveria Colonna, Barbara Hemforth, Mariapaola d'Imperio, & Joël Pynte.
(39) Word order effects in production and comprehension. Sandra Pappert, Johannes Schliesser, Dirk Janssen, & Thomas Pechmann.
(40) The thematic projection hypothesis: On preferred argument structures in verb-final sentences. Sandra Pappert, Johannes Schliesser, Dirk Janssen, & Thomas Pechmann.
(41) Does passive expression change your mind? -Evidence from relative clause attachment study in Chinese and English. Xingjia Shen & Don Mitchell.
(42) Word order and focus effect on European Portuguese sentence processing. Maria Armanda Costa & Isabel Hub Faria.
(43) The EX factor: The nature of individual differences in sentence processing. Thomas A. Farmer, Morten H. Christiansen, & Karen A. Kemtes.
(44) Where language meets vision: Event structure in the visual world. Gerry T. M. Altmann, Vic K. Charles, & Silvia P. Gennari.