posters.bib

@inproceedings{AngeleMalsburg2015ECEM,
  author = {Angele, Bernhard and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {False positives in standard analyses of eye movements in reading},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 18th European Conference on Eye Movements (ECEM)}},
  year = {2015},
  editor = {Ulrich Ansorge and Thomas Ditye and Arnd Florack and Helmut Leder},
  address = {Vienna, Austria},
  publisher = {Journal of Eye Movement Research},
  keywords = {reading, method, false positives, bonferroni correction},
  abstract = {Standard analyses of eye movements in reading test a set of canonical dependent measures calculated for multiple regions.  Although the resulting multiple comparisons increase the rate of false positive results, it is accepted standard practice not to correct for that.  We investigated false positives rates through computer simulations and tested how much statistical power has to be sacrificed to control them.  In 100.000 iterations, we generated six realistic data sets of eye movements for a hypothetical experiment with typical parameters.  The true effect sizes of the manipulation ranged from 0 ms to 40 ms.  Four standard measures were analyzed using linear mixed models: first fixation duration, gaze duration, go-past time, and total viewing time.  In the data sets with no true effect, the rate of false positives was 12.1\%, i.e. much higher than the conventionally accepted 5\%.  A Bonferroni correction reduced false positives to 3.2\% and was therefore slightly more conservative than required.  The reduction in power due to the Bonferroni correction was moderate, e.g., from 90\% to 75\% for effect sizes of 5 ms.  Contrary to conventional wisdom, the Bonferroni correction seems to be an appropriate tool for controlling false positives in reading experiments.},
  venue = {University of Vienna}
}
@article{BianchiEtAl2020VSS,
  author = {Bianchi, Bruno and Loredo, Rodrigo and Carden, Julia and Jaichenco, Virginia and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Shalom, Diego and Kamienkowski, Juan},
  title = {Different sources of predictions during natural reading: an {EEG} and Eye-Tracking co-registration study},
  journal = {Journal of Vision},
  year = {2020},
  volume = {20},
  number = {11},
  pages = {1308--1308},
  month = oct,
  note = {Vision Sciences Society Annual Meeting 2020 abstract},
  day = {20},
  issn = {1534-7362},
  doi = {10.1167/jov.20.11.1308},
  abstract = {During reading our brain predicts upcoming words. If predictions are correct, words can be processed faster when they are finally fixated. It has been amply shown that Predictability (the variable that estimates the probability of guessing the next word) have an impact on how we move our eyes across the text and that it modulates brain potentials associated with word processing. On the one side, more predictable words are fixated for shorter periods of time than less predictable words. On the other side, more predictable words correspond to less N400 amplitude. This knowledge comes from separated EEG and eye movement experiments, but in the last few years, co-registration experiments enabled us to test these hypotheses together in more natural contexts. With the aim of investigating different sources of predictions during reading, in previous studies, we showed that mnemonic predictions (i.e. predictions performed purely on long term memory, like when reading a proverb or a song lyric) and predictions done purely on the linguistic context have different impact, both on gaze duration and on the N400. Here, we asked participants to read proverbs and common sentences while we recorded EEG and eye movements simultaneously. Firstly, we analysed brain activity aligned to fixation onset (fixation-related potential, FRPs) showing differences between Proverbs and Common sentences in late potentials evoked by low- and high-Predictable words. Secondly, we analysed oscillations aligned to fixation onset (fixation-related spectral perturbations, FRSPs) showing differences between sentence type only in low-frequency bands after 200ms. These results extend our knowledge of the differences between the mechanisms involved in the prediction of the following word.}
}
@inproceedings{BoyceEtAl2018CUNY,
  author = {Veronica Boyce and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Poppels, Till and Roger Levy},
  title = {Implicit gender biases in the production and comprehension of pronominal references},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 31th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2018},
  editor = {Fernanda Ferreira and John Henderson and Tamara Swaab and Matt Traxler},
  month = mar,
  address = {Davis, CA, USA},
  publisher = {UC Davis},
  keywords = {gender bias, gender stereotypes, pronouns, production, comprehension}
}
@inproceedings{BoyceEtAl2019LSA,
  author = {Veronica Boyce and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Till Poppels and Roger Levy},
  title = {Female gender is consistently under-expressed in pronoun production and under-inferred in comprehension},
  booktitle = {{93th Annual Meeting of the Linguistics Society of America}},
  year = {2019},
  editor = {Roumyana Pancheva and Khalil Iskarous},
  address = {New York, NY, USA},
  publisher = {Linguistic Society of America},
  pdf = {BoyceEtAl2019LSA.pdf},
  abstract = {Language production and comprehension draw on wide-ranging knowledge and beliefs, including general world knowledge and contextually variable information. Pronominal references to role nouns with diverse gender biases provide a window into the interplay of these sources of information: violations of stereotypical gender elicit surprise (e.g., referring to a surgeon as she), but comprehenders can accommodate to non-stereotypical genders within discourse. In two experiments, we investigate how gender expectations are reflected in production and comprehension of pronominal references to role nouns. Our results indicate that female gender is consistently underused in English pronoun production, and under-inferred in English pronoun comprehension.},
}
@inproceedings{KobeleEtAl2012AMLaP,
  author = {Kobele, Gregory and Lagrou, Evelyne and Engelmann, Felix and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Musa, Ryan and Gerth, Sabrina and van de Vijver, Ruben and Hale, John},
  title = {Incremental processing difficulty in cross-serial and nested verb cluster},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 18th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference ({AMLaP})}},
  year = {2012},
  editor = {Giovanna Egidi and Uri Hasson and Remo Job and Francesco Vespignani and Roberto Zamparelli},
  pages = {150},
  address = {Trento, Italy},
  publisher = {University of Trento},
  venue = {Riva del Garda, Italy}
}
@inproceedings{LaurinavichyuteMalsburg2018AMLaP,
  author = {Anna Laurinavichyute and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {Semantic Attraction in Sentence Processing},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 24th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference ({AMLaP})}},
  year = {2018},
  editor = {Pia Knoeferle},
  month = sep,
  address = {Berlin, Germany},
  publisher = {Humboldt Universität Berlin},
  keywords = {sentence processing},
  pdf = {LaurinavichyuteMalsburg2018AMLaP.pdf}
}
@inproceedings{LaurinavichyuteMalsburg2018CUNY1,
  author = {Anna Laurinavichyute and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {Semantic attraction in sentence processing},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 31th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2018},
  editor = {Fernanda Ferreira and John Henderson and Tamara Swaab and Matt Traxler},
  month = mar,
  address = {Davis, CA, USA},
  publisher = {UC Davis},
  keywords = {agreement attraction, sentence production, semantics}
}
@inproceedings{LaurinavichyuteMalsburg2018CUNY2,
  author = {Anna Laurinavichyute and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {Agreement attraction in grammatical sentences},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 31th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2018},
  editor = {Fernanda Ferreira and John Henderson and Tamara Swaab and Matt Traxler},
  month = mar,
  address = {Davis, CA, USA},
  publisher = {UC Davis},
  keywords = {agreement attraction, sentence comprehension}
}
@inproceedings{LaurinavichyuteMalsburg2019CUNY,
  author = {Anna Laurinavichyute and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {Agreement attraction effects in the comprehension of grammatical sentences},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 32th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2019},
  editor = {Eliana Colunga and Albert Kim and Laura Michaelis and Bhuvana Narasimhan},
  month = mar,
  address = {Boulder, CO, USA},
  publisher = {University of Colorado Boulder},
  pdf = {LaurinavichyuteMalsburg2019CUNY.pdf},
}
@inproceedings{LaurinavichyuteMalsburg2020AMLaP,
  author = {Anna Laurinavichyute and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {The {Lewis and Vasishth} model predicts agreement and semantic attraction effects in acceptability judgments, but not in response times},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 26th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference ({AMLaP})}},
  year = {2020},
  editor = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Shravan Vasishth and Isabelle Wartenburger},
  month = sep,
  address = {Potsdam, Germany},
  publisher = {Universität Potsdam},
  keywords = {agreement attraction, semantic attraction, lewis-vasishth model},
}
@inproceedings{LaurinavichyuteMalsburg2021,
  author = {Anna Laurinavichyute and Titus {von der Malsburg}},
  title = {Agreement attraction in grammatical sentences arises only in the good-enough processing mode},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 34th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2021},
  editor = {John Trueswell and Delphine Dahan and Anna Papafragou and Gareth Roberts and Kathryn Schuler and Florian Schwarz and Charles Yang},
  month = mar,
  address = {Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States},
  publisher = {University of Pennsylvania},
}
@inproceedings{Malsburg2009ECEM,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {Choice of saccade detection algorithm has a considerable impact on eye tracking measures},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 15th European Conference on Eye Movements (ECEM)}},
  year = {2009},
  editor = {Simon Liversedge},
  address = {Southampton, UK},
  publisher = {Journal of Eye Movement Research},
  venue = {University of Southampton}
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgAngele2015CUNY,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Angele, Bernhard},
  title = {False-positive rates in eyetracking studies with multiple dependent measures},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 28th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2015},
  editor = {Elsi Kaiser and Toby Mintz and Roumyana Pancheva and Jason Zevin},
  month = mar,
  address = {Los Angeles, CA, USA},
  publisher = {University of Southern California},
  pdf = {MalsburgAngele2015CUNY.pdf},
  keywords = {reading, method, false positives, Bonferroni correction},
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgEtAl2011ECEM,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Reinhold Kliegl and Shravan Vasishth},
  title = {A scanpath measure reveals effects of age of reader and syntactic complexity of sentences},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 16th European Conference on Eye Movements (ECEM)}},
  year = {2011},
  editor = {Françoise Vitu and Eric Castet and Laurent Goffart},
  pages = {254},
  address = {Marseilles, France},
  publisher = {Journal of Eye Movement Research},
  venue = {Université de Provence, Marseilles, France}
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgEtAl2012CUNY,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Reinhold Kliegl and Shravan Vasishth},
  title = {Determinants of scanpath regularity in reading},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 25th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2012},
  editor = {Dianne Bradley and Eva Fernández and Fodor, Janet Dean},
  pages = {82},
  address = {New York City, NY, USA},
  publisher = {CUNY Graduate School and University Center},
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgEtAl2013ECEM_coreg,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Metzner, Paul and Vasishth, Shravan and Rösler, Frank},
  title = {Co-registration of eye movements and brain potentials as a tool for research on reading and language comprehension},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 17th European Conference on Eye Movements (ECEM)}},
  year = {2013},
  editor = {Holmqvist, Kenneth and Mulvey, F. and Johansson, Roger},
  pages = {462},
  address = {Lund, Sweden},
  publisher = {Journal of Eye Movement Research},
  keywords = {co-registration, erp, eeg, eye movements, sentence processing},
  abstract = {Recent research demonstrated the feasibility of analyzing fixation-related brain potentials (FRPs) recorded during natural reading (Kretzschmar et al., 2009; Dimigen et al., 2011). Two questions arise from these studies: (1) Are effects observed with fixation-triggered EEG signals comparable to those observed in standard RSVP designs? (2) Does the combined analysis of EEG and fixation data provide additional insights into reading and comprehension processes that are not available with either method alone? Both above-mentioned studies used material known to robustly elicit strong N400 effects. The present study (N=50) examined responses to a more subtle manipulation representative of common experimental designs: we manipulated the distance between anaphoric expressions (pronouns, verb ellipsis) and their antecedents. Differences were examined using a non-parametric Monte Carlo test (Maris \& Oostenveld, 2007). Increased distance of the antecedent elicited an early frontocentral negativity in response to verb ellipses (88ms-134ms, p<0.001) and a negativity at frontocentral and parietal electrodes on the words following pronouns (98ms-186ms, p<0.001). We discuss these results in the context of earlier findings and argue that adopting FRP-methodology requires factoring in complex visuomotor contingencies that are not yet fully understood and that evoke ERP effects different from those seen in RSVP designs.},
  venue = {Lund University}
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgEtAl2014CUNY,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Metzner, Paul and Vasishth, Shravan and Rösler, Frank},
  title = {Using co-registration of eye movements and event-related brain potentials to study the processing of anaphoric dependencies},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 27th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2014},
  editor = {Nikole Patson and Shari Speer and Lauren Squires and Rory Turnbull and Laura Wagner and Abby Walker},
  pages = {187},
  address = {Columbus, OH, USA},
  publisher = {Ohio State University},
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgEtAl2015AMLaP,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Vasishth, Shravan and Levy, Roger},
  title = {The impact of reading modality on sentence comprehension},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 21th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference ({AMLaP})}},
  year = {2015},
  editor = {Albert Gatt and Holger Mitterer},
  address = {Valetta, Malta},
  publisher = {University of Malta},
  keywords = {reading, method, adaptation, rsvp, self-paced reading, online study, sentence comprehension}
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgEtAl2015AMLaP-Fleming,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Joseph, Holly and Troscianko, Emily and Kukkonen, Karin and Nation, Kate},
  title = {The influence of foreshadowing metaphors in a crime story by {Ian Fleming}},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 21th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference ({AMLaP})}},
  year = {2015},
  editor = {Albert Gatt and Holger Mitterer},
  address = {Valetta, Malta},
  publisher = {University of Malta},
  keywords = {literature, reading, comprehension, metaphor, eye-tracking, self-paced reading}
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgEtAl2015CUNY,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Vasishth, Shravan and Metzner, Paul and Levy, Roger},
  title = {How presentation modality influences reading comprehension},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 28th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2015},
  editor = {Elsi Kaiser and Toby Mintz and Roumyana Pancheva and Jason Zevin},
  address = {Los Angeles, CA, USA},
  publisher = {University of Southern California},
  pdf = {MalsburgEtAl2015CUNY.pdf},
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgEtAl2018AMLaP,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Boyce, Veronica and Poppels, Till and Levy, Roger},
  title = {Gender-biases in language processing: {Explicit} beliefs about event outcomes vs. implicit linguistic expectations},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 24th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference ({AMLaP})}},
  year = {2018},
  editor = {Pia Knoeferle},
  month = sep,
  address = {Berlin, Germany},
  publisher = {Humboldt Universität Berlin},
  keywords = {sentence processing},
  pdf = {MalsburgEtAl2018AMLaP.pdf}
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgVasishth2007ECEM,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Vasishth, Shravan},
  title = {A time-sensitive similarity measure for scanpaths},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 14th European Conference on Eye Movements (ECEM)}},
  year = {2007},
  editor = {Reinhold Kliegl and Ralf Engbert},
  address = {Potsdam, Germany},
  publisher = {Journal of Eye Movement Research},
  pdf = {MalsburgVasishth2007ECEM.pdf},
  venue = {University of Potsdam}
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgVasishth2008CUNY,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Shravan Vasishth},
  title = {A new method for analyzing eye movements in reading that is sensitive to spatial and temporal patterns in sequences of fixations},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 21th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2008},
  editor = {Peter Gordon},
  pages = {118},
  address = {Chapel Hill, NC, USA},
  publisher = {University of North Caroline at Chapel Hill},
  pdf = {MalsburgVasishth2008CUNY.pdf},
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgVasishth2009CUNY,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Shravan Vasishth},
  title = {Analyzing spatio-temporal patterns in eye movements: {A} method and software},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 22th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2009},
  editor = {Matthew Traxler and Tamara Swaab},
  address = {Davis, CA, USA},
  publisher = {University of California, Davis},
  pdf = {MalsburgVasishth2009CUNY.pdf},
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgVasishth2009Cortona,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Shravan Vasishth},
  title = {Readers use different strategies to recover from garden-paths},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the Summer School on Embodied Language Games and Construction Grammar}},
  year = {2009},
  address = {Cortona, Italy},
  organization = {Evolutionary Linguistics Association},
}
@inproceedings{MalsburgVasishth2011CUNY,
  sortname = {Malsburg},
  author = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Shravan Vasishth},
  title = {Eye-movement strategies for dealing with garden-path sentences},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 24th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2011},
  editor = {Anne Fernald and Frank, Michael C. and Dan Jurafsky and Sag, Ivan A. and Thomas Wasow},
  pages = {205--206},
  address = {Stanford, CA, USA},
  publisher = {Stanford University},
}
@inproceedings{MaruschEtAl2013,
  author = {Marusch, Tina and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Bastiaanse, Roelien and Burchert, Frank},
  title = {{Tempusmorphologie bei deutschen Agrammatikern: Die Sprachproduktion von regulären, irregulären und gemischten Verben}},
  booktitle = {{Spektrum Patholinguistik}},
  year = {2013},
  volume = {6},
  pages = {219--223},
  address = {Potsdam, Germany},
  publisher = {Universitätsverlag Potsdam},
  keywords = {agrammatism, tense, regular and irregular verbs, mixed verbs, inflectional morphology, time reference},
  abstract = {Seit langem wird debattiert, wie reguläre und irreguläre Vergangenheitsformen repräsentiert und verarbeitet werden (Rumelhart \& McClelland, 1986; Pinker \& Prince, 1988). Das Dual- Mechanism-Modell (DMM; Pinker \& Prince, 1988; Clahsen, 1999) nimmt an, dass reguläre und irreguläre Formen von zwei verschiedenen Mechanismen verarbeitet werden. Vertreter des Single-Mechanism Ansatzes gehen alternativ von einem einzigen Mechanismus aus, der sowohl der Verarbeitung von regulären als auch irregulären Verben dient.}
}
@inproceedings{MetznerEtAl2014AMLaP,
  author = {Metzner, Paul and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Vasishth, Shravan and Rösler, Frank},
  title = {Recovering from syntactic and semantic violations: The relationship between eye movements and brain responses},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 20th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference ({AMLaP})}},
  year = {2014},
  editor = {Martin Corley and Hugh Rabagliati and Mante Nieuwland and Patrick Sturt and Martin Pickering and Andrea Martin},
  pages = {101},
  address = {Edinburgh, UK},
  publisher = {University of Edinburgh},
}
@inproceedings{MetznerEtAl2014SNL,
  author = {Metzner, Paul and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Vasishth, Shravan and Rösler, Frank},
  title = {Different coping strategies in sentence processing can be disentangled using coregistered eye movements and brain potentials},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the Sixth Annual Society for the Neurobiology of Language Conference}},
  year = 2014,
  address = {Amsterdam, Netherlands},
  publisher = {Society for the Neurobiology of Language},
}
@inproceedings{MeziereEtAl2020AMLaP,
  author = {Diane Mézière and Lili Yu and Erik Reichle and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Genevieve McArthur},
  title = {Using eye movements to index reading comprehension ability},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 26th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference ({AMLaP})}},
  year = {2020},
  editor = {{von der Malsburg}, Titus and Shravan Vasishth and Isabelle Wartenburger},
  month = sep,
  address = {Potsdam, Germany},
  publisher = {Universität Potsdam},
  keywords = {reading strategy, comprehension, diagnostics},
}
@inproceedings{MeziereEtAl2021CUNY,
  author = {Diane Mézière and Lili Yu and Erik Reichle and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Genevieve McArthur},
  title = {Using eye movements to predict performance on reading comprehension tests},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 34th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2021},
  editor = {John Trueswell and Delphine Dahan and Anna Papafragou and Gareth Roberts and Kathryn Schuler and Florian Schwarz and Charles Yang},
  month = mar,
  address = {Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States},
  publisher = {University of Pennsylvania},
}
@inproceedings{MorganEtAl2016AMLaP,
  author = {Morgan, Adam and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Ferreira, Victor and Wittenberg, Eva},
  title = {Resumptive pronouns hinder sentence comprehension in English},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 22th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference ({AMLaP})}},
  year = {2016},
  editor = {Manuel Carreiras and Simona Mancini and Nicola Molinaro and Doug Davidson and Sendy Caffarra and Clara Martin},
  pages = {98},
  address = {Bilbao, Spain},
  publisher = {Basque Center on Cognition, Brain and Language.},
  pdf = {MorganEtAl2016AMLaP.pdf},
  venue = {Bizkaia Aretoa, Bilbao}
}
@inproceedings{MorganEtAl2017CUNY,
  author = {Morgan, Adam and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Victor Ferreira and Eva Wittenberg},
  title = {This is the structure that we wonder why anyone produces it: Resumptive pronouns in English help production but hinder comprehension},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 30th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2017},
  editor = {Edward Gibson and Idan Blank and Evelina Fedorenko and Richard Futrell and Melissa Kline and Rachel Ryskin},
  month = mar,
  address = {Boston, MA, USA},
  publisher = {Massachusetts Institute of Technology},
  keywords = {sentence processing, resumptive pronouns, local coherence},
}
@inproceedings{MorganEtAl2018AMLaP,
  author = {Adam Morgan and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Victor Ferreira and Eva Wittenberg},
  title = {English resumptive pronouns do not help the comprehender},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 24th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference ({AMLaP})}},
  year = {2018},
  editor = {Pia Knoeferle},
  month = sep,
  address = {Berlin, Germany},
  publisher = {Humboldt Universität Berlin},
  keywords = {sentence processing, resumption, comprehension},
  pdf = {MorganEtAl2018AMLaP.pdf}
}
@inproceedings{MorganEtAl2018CUNY,
  author = {Adam Morgan and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Victor Ferreira and Eva Wittenberg},
  title = {This is the structure that we wonder why anyone produces it: {Resumptive} pronouns in {English} hinder comprehension},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 31th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2018},
  editor = {Fernanda Ferreira and John Henderson and Tamara Swaab and Matt Traxler},
  month = mar,
  address = {Davis, CA, USA},
  publisher = {UC Davis},
  keywords = {sentence comprehension, sentence production, resumption, resumptive pronouns}
}
@inproceedings{PoppelsEtAl2021CUNY,
  author = {Till Poppels and Veronica Boyce and Chelsea Ajunwa and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Roger Levy},
  title = {Bias against “she” pronouns can be rapidly overcome by changing event expectations},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 34th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2021},
  editor = {John Trueswell and Delphine Dahan and Anna Papafragou and Gareth Roberts and Kathryn Schuler and Florian Schwarz and Charles Yang},
  month = mar,
  address = {Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States},
  publisher = {University of Pennsylvania},
}
@inproceedings{SchaeferEtAl2018AMLaP,
  author = {Robin Schäfer and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Sol Lago},
  title = {Agreement Attraction in German {SOV} Structures: {An ERP} Study},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 24th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference ({AMLaP})}},
  year = {2018},
  editor = {Pia Knoeferle},
  month = sep,
  address = {Berlin, Germany},
  publisher = {Humboldt Universität Berlin},
  keywords = {sentence processing},
  pdf = {SchaeferEtAl2018AMLaP.pdf}
}
@inproceedings{SchaeferEtAl2019CUNY,
  author = {Robin Schäfer and Sol Lago and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {{ERP} evidence of object agreement attraction in comprehension},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 32th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2019},
  editor = {Eliana Colunga and Albert Kim and Laura Michaelis and Bhuvana Narasimhan},
  month = mar,
  address = {Boulder, CO, USA},
  publisher = {University of Colorado Boulder},
  pdf = {SchaeferEtAl2019CUNY.pdf},
}
@inproceedings{StoneEtAl2018CUNY,
  author = {Kate Stone and Shravan Vasishth and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {Expectations and prediction in sentence comprehension: {German} particle verbs as a test case},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 31th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2018},
  editor = {Fernanda Ferreira and John Henderson and Tamara Swaab and Matt Traxler},
  month = mar,
  address = {Davis, CA, USA},
  publisher = {UC Davis},
  keywords = {prediction, sentence comprehension, particle verbs}
}
@inproceedings{StoneEtAl2019CUNY,
  author = {Kate Stone and Shravan Vasishth and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {{ERP} evidence for long-distance lexical predictions in {German} particle verb constructions},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 32th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2019},
  editor = {Eliana Colunga and Albert Kim and Laura Michaelis and Bhuvana Narasimhan},
  month = mar,
  address = {Boulder, CO, USA},
  publisher = {University of Colorado Boulder},
  pdf = {StoneEtAl2019CUNY.pdf},
}
@inproceedings{StoneEtAl2020CUNY,
  author = {Kate Stone and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Shravan Vasishth},
  title = {Contextual constraint and the frontal post-{N400} positivity: {A} large-sample, pre-registered {ERP} study},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 33th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2020},
  editor = {Mara Breen and Brian Dillon and Lyn Frazier and John Kingston and Shota Momma and Adrian Staub},
  month = mar,
  address = {Amherst MA, USA},
  publisher = {University of Massachusetts, Amherst},
}
@inproceedings{VasishthEtAl2010CUNY,
  author = {Vasishth, Shravan and Drenhaus, Heiner and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {Integration difficulty and expectation-based syntactic comprehension},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 23th Annual {CUNY} Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2010},
  editor = {Douglas Bemis and Jon Brennan and Suzanne Dikker and Inna Livitz and Alec Marantz and Brian McElree and Liina Pylkkänen and Hugh Rabagliati},
  pages = {111},
  address = {New York City, NY, USA},
  publisher = {New York University},
}
@inproceedings{MeziereEtAl2021SSSRb,
  author = {Diane Mézière and Lili Yu and Erik Reichle and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Genevieve McArthur},
  title = {Exploring recall as an ecologically-valid measure of reading comprehension},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the Twenty-Eighth Annual Meeting of the Society for the Scientific Study of Reading}},
  year = {2021},
  editor = {Kate Cain and Clare Wood and Jessie Ricketts and Lesly Wade-Woolley},
  publisher = {Society for the Scientific Study of Reading},
}
@inproceedings{MeziereEtAl2021AMLaP,
  author = {Diane Mézière and Lili Yu and Erik Reichle and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Genevieve McArthur},
  title = {Can eye movements be used to predict reading comprehension ability?},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 27th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference ({AMLaP})}},
  year = {2021},
  editor = {Giuseppina Turco and Gabriel Thiberge and Céline Pozniak and Till Poppels and Barbara Hemforth and Saveria Colonna and Anne Abeillé},
  month = sep,
  address = {Paris, France},
  publisher = {Université de Paris},
  keywords = {eye movements, reading comprehension, reading assessment},
}
@inproceedings{LaurinavichyuteEtAl2023HSP,
  author = {Anna Laurinavichyute and Himanshu Yadav and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Shravan Vasishth},
  title = {Agreement attraction effects depend on the processing goal},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 36th Annual Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2023},
  editor = {Tessa Warren and Scott Fraundorf and Michael Walsh Dickey and Natasha Tokowicz and Seth Wiener},
  month = mar,
  address = {Pittsburgh, USA},
  publisher = {University of Pittsburgh},
  keywords = {agreement attraction, sentence comprehension, task effects, task demands}
}
@inproceedings{RanjanMalsburg2023CogSci,
  author = {Sidharth Ranjan and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {A bounded rationality account of dependency length minimization in {Hindi}},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the 45th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society},
  year = {2023},
  editor = {Micah Goldwater and Florencia Anggoro and Brett Hayes and Desmond Ong},
  address = {Sidney, Australia},
  organization = {Cognitive Science Society},
  publisher = {Cognitive Science Society},
  url = {https://escholarship.org/uc/item/85q7x1nd},
  pdf = {RanjanMalsburg2023CogSci.pdf},
  abstract = {The principle of dependency length minimization, which seeks to keep syntactically related words close in a sentence, is thought to universally shape the structure of human languages for effective communication. However, the extent to which dependency length minimization is applied in human language systems is not yet fully understood. Preverbally, the placement of long-before-short constituents and post-verbally, short-before-long constituents are known to minimize overall dependency length of a sentence. In this study, we test the hypothesis that placing only the shortest preverbal constituent next to the main-verb explains word order preferences in Hindi (a SOV language) as opposed to the global minimization of dependency length.  We characterize this approach as a least-effort strategy because it is a cost-effective way to shorten all dependencies between the verb and its preverbal dependencies. As such, this approach is consistent with the bounded-rationality perspective according to which decision making is governed by `fast but frugal’ heuristics rather than by a search for optimal solutions. Consistent with this idea, our results indicate that actual corpus sentences in the Hindi-Urdu Treebank corpus are better explained by the least effort strategy than by global minimization of dependency lengths. Additionally, for the task of distinguishing corpus sentences from counterfactual variants, we find that the dependency length and constituent length of the constituent closest to the main verb is a much better predictor of whether a sentence appeared in the corpus than total dependency length. Overall, our work sheds light on the role of cognitive resource constraints in shaping natural languages.}
}
@inproceedings{RanjanMalsburg2023SAFAL,
  author = {Sidharth Ranjan and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {Dependency length minimization in {SOV} languages: {A} bounded rationality view},
  booktitle = {{The South Asian Forum on the Acquisition and Processing of Language}},
  year = {2023},
  editor = {Samar Husain and Ark Verma},
  volume = {4},
  month = dec,
  address = {Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India},
  organization = {Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur},
  publisher = {Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur},
}
@inproceedings{PryslopskaMalsburg2024LE,
  author = {Anna Prysłopska and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {It’s not just all in the head: {Towards} a processing model of {German} adjective-noun-noun constructions and the bracketing paradox},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of Linguistic Evidence 2024}},
  year = {2024},
  month = feb,
  editor = {Doreen Georgi and Isabell Wartenburger and Adamantios Gafos and Andreas Hölzl and Raúl Bendezú Araujo},
  address = {Potsdam, Germany},
  organization = {Collaborative Research Center 1287: Limits of Variability in Language},
  publisher = {University of Potsdam},
}
@inproceedings{LaurinavichyuteEtAl2024LE,
  author = {Anna Laurinavichyute and Himanshu Yadav and {von der Malsburg}, Titus and Shravan Vasishth},
  title = {Agreement attraction effects depend on the goal of processing},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of Linguistic Evidence 2024}},
  year = {2024},
  month = feb,
  editor = {Doreen Georgi and Isabell Wartenburger and Adamantios Gafos and Andreas Hölzl and Raúl Bendezú Araujo},
  address = {Potsdam, Germany},
  organization = {Collaborative Research Center 1287: Limits of Variability in Language},
  publisher = {University of Potsdam},
}
@inproceedings{PryslopskaMalsburg2024ELM,
  author = {Anna Prysłopska and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {Towards a psycholinguistic model of bracketing paradoxes},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of Experiments in Linguistic Meaning}},
  year = {2024},
  month = jun,
  editor = {Anna Papafragou and Florian Schwarz},
  number = {3},
  address = {Philadelphia, PA 19104-6228},
  organization = {University of Pennsylvania},
  publisher = {Linguistic Society of America},
}
@inproceedings{PryslopskaMalsburg2024HSP,
  author = {Anna Prysłopska and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {Towards a psycholinguistic model of bracketing paradoxes},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the 37th Annual Conference on Human Sentence Processing}},
  year = {2024},
  month = may,
  editor = {Julie Boland and Jon Brennan and Lisa Levinson and Rick Lewis and Savithry Namboodiripad},
  address = {Ann Arbor, USA},
  organization = {University of Michigan Ann Arbor},
  publisher = {University of Michigan Ann Arbor},
}
@inproceedings{PrysłopskaMalsburg2024CogSci,
  author = {Anna Prysłopska and {von der Malsburg}, Titus},
  title = {Severe Storm Warnings for Four-Story Homeowners: {Towards} a Processing Model of Bracketing Paradoxes},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the 46th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society},
  year = {2024},
  editor = {Larissa K Samuelson and Stefan Frank and Mariya Toneva and Allyson Mackey and Eliot Hazeltine},
  address = {Rotterdam, Netherlands},
  organization = {Cognitive Science Society},
  publisher = {Cognitive Science Society},
}