Journal of Memory and Language
(The 200 most cited articles)
1.
Mixed-effects modeling with
crossed random effects for subjects and items
2.
A process dissociation
framework: Separating automatic from intentional uses of memory
3.
The nature of recollection
and familiarity: A review of 30 years of research
4.
Random effects structure
for confirmatory hypothesis testing: Keep it maximal
5.
Is working memory capacity
task dependent?
6.
Categorical data analysis:
Away from ANOVAs (transformation or not) and towards logit mixed models
7.
Category Interference in
Translation and Picture Naming: Evidence for Asymmetric Connections Between
Bilingual Memory Representations
8.
Phonological memory
deficits in language disordered children: Is there a causal connection?
9.
Memory and the self
10.
Event-related brain
potentials elicited by syntactic anomaly
11.
Tracking the Time Course of
Spoken Word Recognition Using Eye Movements: Evidence for Continuous Mapping
Models
12.
Individual differences in
syntactic processing: The role of working memory
13.
The independence of
syntactic processing
14.
Exploring the time course
of lexical access in language production: Picture-word interference
studies
15.
Evaluation of the role of
phonological STM in the development of vocabulary in children: A longitudinal
study
16.
Semantic Influences On
Parsing: Use of Thematic Role Information in Syntactic Ambiguity
Resolution
17.
Memory for familiar and
unfamiliar words: Evidence for a long-term memory contribution to short-term
memory span
18.
Word segmentation: The role
of distributional cues
19.
On the tip of the tongue:
What causes word finding failures in young and older adults?
20.
Rethinking interference
theory: Executive control and the mechanisms of forgetting
21.
Causal thinking and the
representation of narrative events
22.
Bilingual Language
Switching in Naming: Asymmetrical Costs of Language Selection
23.
Infants′ Sensitivity to
Phonotactic Patterns in the Native Language
24.
Probabilistic Phonotactics
and Neighborhood Activation in Spoken Word Recognition
25.
The Enigma of Organization
and Distinctiveness
26.
The retrieval of
phonological forms in production: Tests of predictions from a connectionist
model
27.
The syllable's differing
role in the segmentation of French and English
28.
Age Constraints on Second-Language
Acquisition
29.
Infants′ Sensitivity to the
Sound Patterns of Native Language Words
30.
The Representation of
Verbs: Evidence from Syntactic Priming in Language Production
31.
Event-Related Brain
Potentials Elicited by Failure to Agree
32.
The time-course of
prediction in incremental sentence processing: Evidence from anticipatory eye
movements
33.
Suppressing False
Recognition in Younger and Older Adults: The Distinctiveness Heuristic
34.
Causal relatedness and
importance of story events
35.
Memory illusions:
Recalling, recognizing, and recollecting events that never occurred
36.
A Rose by Any Other Name:
Long-Term Memory Structure and Sentence Processing
37.
Mental models contribute to
foregrounding during text comprehension
38.
Lexical ambiguity and
fixation times in reading
39.
How to Deal with "The
Language-as-Fixed-Effect Fallacy": Common Misconceptions and Alternative
Solutions
40.
Remembering Mistaken for
Knowing: Ease of Retrieval as a Basis for Confidence in Answers to General
Knowledge Questions
41.
The Relation between
Remembering and Knowing as Bases for Recognition: Effects of Size
Congruency
42.
Symbol Grounding and
Meaning: A Comparison of High-Dimensional and Embodied Theories of Meaning
43.
Spatial mental models derived
from survey and route descriptions
44.
The contributions of verb
bias and plausibility to the comprehension of temporarily ambiguous
sentences
45.
What does cross-linguistic
variation in semantic coordination of speech and gesture reveal?: Evidence for
an interface representation of spatial thinking and speaking
46.
Lexical access in bilingual
speech production: Evidence from language switching in highly proficient
bilinguals and L2 learners
47.
Event-related brain
potentials during initial encoding and recognition memory of congruous and
incongruous words
48.
Singulars and plurals in
Dutch: Evidence for a parallel dual-route model
49.
Components of fluent
reading
50.
Modeling the Influence of
Thematic Fit (and Other Constraints) in On-line Sentence Comprehension
51.
Constructing Mental Models
of Machines from Text and Diagrams
52.
Category norms: An updated
and expanded version of the Battig and Montague (1969) norms
53.
Retrieval Dynamics of
Recognition and Frequency Judgments: Evidence for Separate Processes of
Familiarity and Recall
54.
The role of mental imagery
in the creation of false childhood memories
55.
Illusions of immediate
memory: Evidence of an attributional basis for feelings of familiarity and
perceptual quality
56.
The locus of word-frequency
effects in the pronunciation task: Lexical access and/or production?
57.
Comprehension of
illustrated text: Pictures help to build mental models
58.
When long-term learning
depends on short-term storage
59.
Speaking while monitoring
addressees for understanding
60.
Recognition of Cognates and
Interlingual Homographs: The Neglected Role of Phonology
61.
Word segmentation by
8-month-olds: When speech cues count more than statistics
62.
Orthographic Neighborhood
Effects in Bilingual Word Recognition
63.
Gist-based false
recognition of pictures in older and younger adults
64.
The persistence of false
memories in list recall
65.
Lexical representation of
cognates and noncognates in compound bilinguals
66.
The independence of
combinatory semantic processing: Evidence from event-related potentials
67.
Phonemic activation during
the first 40 ms of word identification: Evidence from backward masking and
priming
68.
Semantic processing and the
development of word-recognition skills: Evidence from children with reading
comprehension difficulties
69.
Toward a network model of
the articulatory loop
70.
Language Processing and
Working Memory: Neuropsychological Evidence for Separate Phonological and
Semantic Capacities
71.
Memory illusions
72.
Individual differences in
comprehending and producing words in context
73.
Word frequency and
neighborhood frequency effects in lexical decision and naming
74.
Sentence memory: A theoretical
analysis
75.
Age of acquisition effects
in word reading and other tasks
76.
Accessibility and situation
models in narrative comprehension
77.
The foundations of spelling
ability: Evidence from a 3-year longitudinal study
78.
The neuropsychology of
memory illusions: False recall and recognition in amnesic patients
79.
Lexical Selection in
Bilinguals: Do Words in the Bilingual's Two Lexicons Compete for
Selection?
80.
On the Evidence for
Maturational Constraints in Second-Language Acquisition
81.
Phonological short-term
memory and foreign-language vocabulary learning
82.
Propositional and
situational representations of text
83.
Classifying implicit memory
tests: Category association and anagram solution
84.
Processing subject and
object relative clauses: Evidence from eye movements
85.
Examples of mixed-effects
modeling with crossed random effects and with binomial data
86.
Automatic (prelexical)
phonetic activation in silent word reading: Evidence from backward masking
87.
A Reevaluation of Working Memory
Capacity in Children
88.
Can CANISO activate CASINO?
Transposed-letter similarity effects with nonadjacent letter positions
89.
Making sense of semantic
ambiguity: Semantic competition in lexical access
90.
Models of Impaired Lexical
Access in Speech Production
91.
An Integrated Theory of
List Memory
92.
Perception is a two-way
street: Feedforward and feedback phonology in visual word recognition
93.
Talkers' signaling of
"new" and "old" words in speech and listeners' perception
and use of the distinction
94.
Priming lexical neighbors
of spoken words: Effects of competition and inhibition
95.
Analyzing 'visual world'
eyetracking data using multilevel logistic regression
96.
Repeated retrieval during
learning is the key to long-term retention
97.
The comprehension of
idioms
98.
Conspiracy effects in word
pronunciation
99.
The time course of
phonological encoding in language production: Phonological encoding inside a
syllable
100.
Working Memory Capacity and
Suppression
101.
The density constraint on
form-priming in the naming task: interference effects from a masked prime
102.
How complex simplex words
can be
103.
The basis of consistency
effects in word naming
104.
The role of verbal output
time in the effects of word length on immediate memory
105.
The rise and fall of false
recall: The impact of presentation duration
106.
Perspective in spatial
descriptions
107.
A new on-line resource for
psycholinguistic studies
108.
Mora or Syllable? Speech
Segmentation in Japanese
109.
Lexical competition in
non-native spoken-word recognition
110.
Syllable Frequency and
Visual Word Recognition in Spanish
111.
Do Bilinguals Activate
Phonological Representations in One or Both of Their Languages When Naming
Words?
112.
Constituent attachment and
thematic role assignment in sentence processing: Influences of content-based
expectations
113.
Rhythmic cues to speech
segmentation: Evidence from juncture misperception
114.
Splitting the Differences:
A Structural Alignment View of Similarity
115.
More use almost always
means a smaller frequency effect: Aging, bilingualism, and the weaker links
hypothesis
116.
Three components of
understanding a programmer's manual: Verbatim, propositional, and situational
representations
117.
The role of inner speech in
task switching: A dual-task investigation
118.
Independence of Input and
Output Phonology in Word Processing and Short-Term Memory
119.
Attempting to Avoid
Illusory Memories: Robust False Recognition of Associates Persists under
Conditions of Explicit Warnings and Immediate Testing
120.
Early Referential Context
Effects in Sentence Processing: Evidence from Event-Related Brain
Potentials
121.
Forward and Backward Word
Translation by Bilinguals
122.
Regeneration in the
short-term recall of sentences
123.
Filler driven parsing: A
study of gap filling in dutch
124.
A formal model of capacity
limits in working memory
125.
Language discrimination by
english-learning 5-month-olds: Effects of rhythm and familiarity
126.
The time course of
phonological encoding in language production: The encoding of successive
syllables of a word
127.
Segmentation of continuous
speech using phonotactics
128.
The long-lasting advantage
of learning sign language in childhood: Another look at the critical period for
language acquisition
129.
Context availability and
lexical decisions for abstract and concrete words
130.
Predictability effects on
durations of content and function words in conversational English
131.
The Feeling of Another′s
Knowing: Prosody and Filled Pauses as Cues to Listeners about the Metacognitive
States of Speakers
132.
Memory predictions are
based on ease of processing
133.
Masked orthographic and
phonological priming in visual word recognition and naming: Cross-task
comparisons
134.
The misremembrance of wines
past: Verbal and perceptual expertise differentially mediate verbal
overshadowing of taste memory
135.
Age-of-acquisition, word
frequency, and neighborhood density effects on spoken word recognition by
children and adults
136.
Modeling Item Length
Effects in Memory Span: No Rehearsal Needed?
137.
The effects of common
ground and perspective on domains of referential interpretation
138.
The acquisition of English
derivational morphology
139.
A destressing
"deafness" in French?
140.
Ambiguous words in context:
An event-related potential analysis of the time course of meaning
activation
141.
Do the Beginnings of Spoken
Words Have a Special Status in Auditory Word Recognition?
142.
Lexical activation in
bilinguals' speech production: Language-specific or language-independent?
143.
Updating situation models
during narrative comprehension
144.
Memory structures that
subserve sentence comprehension
145.
Effects of Visibility
between Speaker and Listener on Gesture Production: Some Gestures Are Meant to
Be Seen
146.
Mora or Phoneme? Further
Evidence for Language-Specific Listening
147.
Regulating mental energy:
Performance units in language production
148.
Accessing lexical ambiguity
in different types of sentential contexts
149.
Prosodic Facilitation and
Interference in the Resolution of Temporary Syntactic Closure Ambiguity
150.
Recall-to-Reject in
Recognition: Evidence from ROC Curves
151.
Frequency Effects and the
Representational Status of Regular Inflections
152.
A linguistically
constrained model of short-term memory for nonwords
153.
False-Recognition Reversal:
When Similarity is Distinctive
154.
Monitoring the Time Course
of Phonological Encoding
155.
Cohesion failure as a
source of memory illusions
156.
Phonology and Orthography
in Visual Word Recognition: Effects of Masked Homophone Primes
157.
Degree of causal
relatedness and memory
158.
Constructing Meaning: The
Role of Affordances and Grammatical Constructions in Sentence
Comprehension
159.
Syntactic Priming in
Immediate Recall of Sentences
160.
Depth of spreading
activation revisited: Semantic mediated priming occurs in lexical
decisions
161.
The use of lexical and
syntactic information in language production: Evidence from the priming of
noun-phrase structure
162.
How to see a reading
unit
163.
Accent and reference
resolution in spoken-language comprehension
164.
Object Shape, Object
Function, and Object Name
165.
Plausibility and the
processing of unbounded dependencies: An eye-tracking study
166.
Constraints on statistical
language learning
167.
Evaluating an adaptive
network model of human learning
168.
Semantic facilitation and
semantic interference in word translation: Implications for models of lexical
access in language production
169.
Using prosody to avoid
ambiguity: Effects of speaker awareness and referential context
170.
Integrating Verbs,
Situation Schemas, and Thematic Role Concepts
171.
Knowing versus Naming:
Similarity and the Linguistic Categorization of Artifacts
172.
Does the Sensitivity of
Judgments of Learning (JOLs) to the Effects of Various Study Activities Depend
on When the JOLs Occur?
173.
PARSER: A Model for Word
Segmentation
174.
Accessing sentence
participants: The advantage of first mention
175.
Assessing the occurrence of
elaborative inferences: Lexical decision versus naming
176.
More than words: Frequency
effects for multi-word phrases
177.
Variability among word
lists in eliciting memory illusions: Evidence for associative activation and
monitoring
178.
Models of accuracy in
repeated-measures designs
179.
The generation effect as an
artifact of selective displaced rehearsal
180.
Spelling-sound consistency
affect the naming of high-frequency words
181.
Masked morphological
priming in visual word recognition
182.
Masked priming of word and
picture naming: The role of syllabic units
183.
Phonological coding and
short-term memory in patients without speech
184.
The real-time mediation of
visual attention by language and world knowledge: Linking anticipatory (and
other) eye movements to linguistic processing
185.
The reading span test and
its predictive power for reading comprehension ability
186.
Strategy training and
working memory task performance
187.
Separating syntactic memory
costs and syntactic integration costs during parsing: The processing of German
WH-questions
188.
Spatial reasoning
189.
Controlling the
Intelligibility of Referring Expressions in Dialogue
190.
Nonlinear Dynamics in the
Resolution of Lexical Ambiguity: A Parallel Distributed Processing Account
191.
Testing the retrieval
effort hypothesis: Does greater difficulty correctly recalling information lead
to higher levels of memory?
192.
A Region of Proximal
Learning model of study time allocation
193.
Determinants of
Wordlikeness: Phonotactics or Lexical Neighborhoods?
194.
The role of lexical
frequency in syntactic ambiguity resolution
195.
How to kick the bucket and
not decompose: Analyzability and idiom processing
196.
Cognitive penetration of
the mechanisms of perception: Compensation for coarticulation of lexically
restored phonemes
197.
Lexical access in phrase
and sentence production: Results from picture-word interference
experiments
198.
The time-course of the
application of binding constraints in reference resolution
199.
Constraint, Word Frequency,
and the Relationship between Lexical Processing Levels in Spoken Word
Production
200.
Inferences during Reading:
Converging Evidence from Discourse Analysis, Talk-Aloud Protocols, and
Recognition Priming
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