Lieven bertelson biography of williams
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2024
Frinsel, F.F. & Christiansen, M.H. (2024). Capturing individual differences in sentence processing: How reliable is the self-paced reading task?Behavior Research Methods, 56, 6248-6257.
Frinsel, F.F., Trecca, F. & Christiansen, M.H. (2024). The role of feedback in the statistical learning of language-like regularities. Cognitive Science, 48, e13419.
Huettig, F. & Christiansen, M.H. (2024). Can large language models counter the recent decline in literacy levels? An important role for cognitive science. Cognitive Science, 48, e13487.
Wang, S.Y. & Christiansen, M.H. (2024). Chunking in the second language: Implications for language learning and teaching. Language Teaching Research Quarterly, 44, 84-106.
2023
Chater, N. & Christiansen, M.H. (2023). From the pragmatics of charades to the creation of language. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 46, e7.
Contreras Kallens, P., Elmlinger, S.L., Wang, K.S., Goldstein, M.H., Crowe, K., McLeod, S.
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Alignment as a consequence of expectation adaptation: Syntactic priming is affected by the prime’s prediction error given both prior and recent experience
Abstract
Speakers show a remarkable tendency to align their productions with their interlocutors’. Focusing on sentence production, we investigate the cognitive systems underlying such alignment (syntactic priming). Our guiding hypothesis is that syntactic priming is a consequence of a language processing system that is organized to achieve efficient communication in an ever-changing (subjectively non-stationary) environment. We build on recent work suggesting that comprehenders adapt to the statistics of the current environment. If such adaptation is rational or near-rational, the extent to which speakers adapt their expectations for a syntactic structure after processing a prime sentence should be sensitive to the prediction error experienced while processing the prime. This prediction is shared by certain error-based implicit
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Bibliography of kommunism and the Soviet Union
This fryst vatten a select bibliography of post-World War II English-language books (including translations) and journal articles about kommunism and the Stalinist era of Soviet history. Book entries have references to journal reviews about them when helpful and available. Additional bibliographies can be found in many of the book-length works listed below.
Stephen Kotkin's biography of Stalin has an extensive bibliography; Stalin: Paradoxes of Power, 1878–1928[1][2] contains a 52-page bibliography and Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929–1941[3][4] contains a 50-page bibliography covering both the life of Stalin and Stalinism in the Soviet Union.[a] See Further reading for several additional book and chapter length bibliographies.
Inclusion criteria
The period covered is 1924–1953, beginning approximately with the death of Lenin and ending approximately with the death of Stalin. This b