All Stories

  1. The ‘laws’ of binocular rivalry: 50 years of Levelt’s propositions
  2. Willem J. Levelt. A history of psycholinguistics: the pre-chomskian era
  3. From bumps to diagrams: Tracing language in the brain
  4. A History of Psycholinguistics
  5. Epilogue
  6. 1951
  7. Verbal behavior
  8. Inventing a psychology of language
  9. Language acquisition and the diary explosion
  10. Wilhelm Wundt’s grand synthesis
  11. Speech acts and functions
  12. Psycholinguistics post-war, pre-Chomsky
  13. Language in the laboratory and modeling microgenesis
  14. New perspectives: Structuralism and the psychology of imageless thought
  15. Language acquisition: Wealth of data, dearth of theory
  16. Language in the brain: The lures of holism
  17. Empirical studies of speech and language usage
  18. A new cross-linguistic perspective and linguistic relativity
  19. Psychology of language during the Third Reich
  20. Planning and articulation in incremental word production: Syllable-frequency effects in English.
  21. The Speaking Brain
  22. Formal Grammars in Linguistics and Psycholinguistics
  23. An Introduction to the Theory of Formal Languages and Automata
  24. Perceptual uniqueness point effects in monitoring internal speech
  25. Telling Time from Analog and Digital Clocks
  26. Incrementality in naming and reading complex numerals: evidence from eyetracking
  27. Gesture and the communicative intention of the speaker
  28. Speech, gesture and the origins of language
  29. Naming analog clocks conceptually facilitates naming digital clocks
  30. Planning levels in naming and reading complex numerals
  31. Semantic distance effects on object and action naming
  32. Inflectional frames in language production
  33. Effects of semantic context in the naming of pictures and words
  34. Producing spoken language: a blueprint of the speaker
  35. The Acquisition of Syllable Types
  36. Merging speech perception and production
  37. The brain does not serve linguistic theory so easily
  38. Met twee woorden spreken
  39. The Interplay Between Meaning and Syntax in Speech: Insights From Meaning-Related Substitution Errors
  40. Effects of Semantic Context in the Naming of Words
  41. A Developmental Grammar for Syllable Structure in the Production of Child Language
  42. Models of word production
  43. A theory of lexical access in speech production
  44. Lexical access in the production of pronouns
  45. Advanced Psycholinguistics: A Bressanone Retrospective for Giovanni D. Flores d'Arcais
  46. Is the syllable frame stored?
  47. Viewing and naming objects: eye movements during noun phrase production
  48. Eye movement control during pattern description
  49. A theory of lexical access in speech production
  50. Do speakers have access to a mental syllabary?
  51. Lexical Access in Speech Production
  52. Lexical Selection, or How to Bridge the Major Rift in Language Processing
  53. The perceptual loop theory not disconfirmed: A reply to MacKay
  54. Fairness in reviewing: A reply to O'Connell
  55. Accessing words in speech production: Stages, processes and representations
  56. Speaking: From Intention to Articulation
  57. Speaking: from intention to articulation
  58. Working Models of Perception; Five General Issues
  59. Stages of Lexical Access
  60. Crossing the Boundaries in Linguistics: Studies Presented to Mantred Bierwisch
  61. Linearization in Describing Spatial Networks
  62. Surface form and memory in question answering
  63. Déjà vu?
  64. Crossing the Boundaries in Linguistics
  65. Lexical Search and Order of Mention in Sentence Production
  66. Toegepaste Aspecten Van Het Taalpsychologisch Onderzoek
  67. Sprache und Kontext
  68. The Child’s Conception of Language
  69. La Frontière Du Mot En Francais
  70. Binocular brightness combinations: Additive and nonadditive aspects
  71. Psychometric Methods in the Study of Meaning.
  72. NOTE ON THE DISTRIBUTION OF DOMINANCE TIMES IN BINOCULAR RIVALRY
  73. THE ALTERNATION PROCESS IN BINOCULAR RIVALRY
  74. BINOCULAR BRIGHTNESS AVERAGING AND CONTOUR INFORMATION
  75. Psychology of Language
  76. Speech production.
  77. Phonological encoding in speech production: Comments on Jurafsky et al., Schiller et al., and van Heuven & Haan