Several of our graduate students, faculty members, and alumni are presenting at the 34th Annual CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing, hosted by the University of Pennsylvania, which will take place virtually this week from March 4th to March 6th, 2021. In alphabetical order by first-mentioned author’s last name:
- Qi Cheng and Rachel Mayberry (with Sheila Price) are presenting a short talk on “When animacy overshadows word order in sentence comprehension: The case of late first-language acquisition” https://www.cuny2021.io/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/CUNY_2021_abstract_335.pdf
- Andrew Kehler (with Clare Patterson, Petra B. Schumacher, Bruno Nicenboim and Johannes Hagen) is presenting a short talk on “German pronoun interpretation follows Bayesian principles” https://www.cuny2021.io/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/CUNY_2021_abstract_116.pdf
- Boyoung Kim and Grant Goodall are presenting a short talk on “The COMP-trace effect and sentence planning: Evidence from L2” https://www.cuny2021.io/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/CUNY_2021_abstract_236.pdf
- Alex Rodríguez and Grant Goodall are presenting a short talk on “Do islands affect only filler-gap dependencies? Evidence from Spanish” https://www.cuny2021.io/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/CUNY_2021_abstract_237.pdf
- Maho Takahashi and Grant Goodall are presenting a short talk on “Gap-filler dependencies are sensitive to islands: The case of Japanese relative clauses” https://www.cuny2021.io/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/CUNY_2021_abstract_123.pdf
- Eva Wittenberg (with Hossein Karimi and Michelle Diaz) is presenting a short talk on “Longer encoding times facilitate subsequent retrieval during sentence processing” https://www.cuny2021.io/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/CUNY_2021_abstract_65.pdf