30.4861, TOC: Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 23 / 1 (2020)
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LINGUIST List: Vol-30-4861. Thu Dec 26 2019. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 30.4861, TOC: Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 23 / 1 (2020)
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================================================================
Date: Thu, 26 Dec 2019 13:37:26
From: Louise Bowes [lbowes at cambridge.org]
Subject: Bilingualism: Language and Cognition Vol. 23, No. 1 (2020)
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
http://cambridge.org
Journal Title: Bilingualism: Language and Cognition
Volume Number: 23
Issue Number: 1
Issue Date: 2020
Main Text:
Obituary
Jubin Abutalebi
1-1
Second language learners develop non-native lexical processing biases
Seth Wiener
119-130
The tug of war between an idiom's figurative and literal meanings
Wendy Ginkel, Ton Dijkstra
131-147
Bilingual versus monolingual infants’ novel word-action mapping before and
after first-word production
Lakshmi Gogate, Madhavilatha Maganti
148-157
Determinants of voice recognition in monolingual and bilingual listeners
Rachel Theodore, Erin Flanagan
158-170
Learning English through out-of-school exposure
Vanessa Wilde, Marc Brysbaert, June Eyckmans
171-185
How does childhood bilingualism and bi-dialectalism affect the interpretation
and processing of pragmatic meanings?
Kyriakos Antoniou, Alma Veenstra, Mikhail Kissine, Napoleon Katsos
186-203
Heritage languages, infants’ language recognition, and artificial grammars for
bilingualism research
Jubin Abutalebi, Harald Clahsen
2-3
Performance difference in verbal fluency in bilingual and monolingual speakers
Abhijeet Patra, Arpita Bose, Theodoros Marinis
204-218
Heritage languages and variation: Identifying shared factors
David Embick, Yosiane White, Meredith Tamminga
21-22
Cognitive control in bilinguals
Michela Bonfieni, Holly Branigan, Martin Pickering, Antonella Sorace
219-230
Do processing resource limitations shape heritage language grammars?
Claudia Felser
23-24
A path to the bilingual advantage: pairwise matching of
individuals–CORRIGENDUM – ERRATUM
Sophia Czapka, Christiane Wotschack, Annegret Klassert, Julia Festman
231-231
The relevance of language-internal variation in predicting heritage language
grammars
Cristina Flores, Esther Rinke
25-26
Towards a comprehensive model of heritage language development
Ayşe Gürel
27-28
Towards modelling heritage speakers' sound systems
Tanja Kupisch
29-30
Predicting outcomes in heritage grammars
Terje Lohndal
31-32
Shrinking structures in heritage languages: Triggered by reduced quantity of
input?
Jürgen Meisel
33-34
Smaller vocabularies lead to morphological overregularization in heritage
language grammars
Silvina Montrul, Sara Mason
35-36
The case for contact induced-change in Heritage Languages
Pieter Muysken
37-38
Leveraging monolingual developmental techniques to better understand heritage
languages
Lisa Pearl
39-40
Understanding heritage languages
Maria Polinsky, Gregory Scontras
4-20
Separating vs. shrinking
Michael Putnam
41-42
Heritage speakers can actively shape not only their grammar but also their
processing
Irina Sekerina, Anna Laurinavichyute
43-45
What counts as the baseline in child heritage language acquisition?
Ludovica Serratrice
46-47
Variability: Definitions of language and language learning
Virginia Valian
48-49
A roadmap for heritage language research
Maria Polinsky, Gregory Scontras
50-55
Variability and stability in early language acquisition
Barbara Höhle, Ranka Bijeljac-Babic, Thierry Nazzi
56-71
Introduction: The use of artificial languages in bilingualism research
Daniel Weiss
72-73
>From Klingon to Colbertian: Using Artificial Languages to Study Word Learning
Sayuri Hayakawa, Siqi Ning, Viorica Marian
74-80
What can artificial languages reveal about morphosyntactic processing in
bilinguals?
Sarah Grey
81-86
Insights into the neural mechanisms of becoming bilingual: A brief synthesis
of second language research with artificial linguistic systems
Kara Morgan-Short
87-91
Bilingualism and statistical learning: Lessons from studies using artificial
languages
Daniel Weiss, Natalie Schwob, Amy Lebkuecher
92-97
Electrophysiology finds no inherent delay for grammatical gender retrieval in
non-native production
Kailen Shantz, Darren Tanner
98-118
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