Trevor Harley is Professor of Cognitive Psychology at the University of Dundee, where he has been Head of Department and then Dean since 2003. He has published numerous academic papers, and is well known for his research on speech errors and speech production, and the relation between language and the brain. He is also the series editor for Psychology Press for Current Issues in Cognitive Psychology: Language.
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VOLUME 1 Part One: Production Aging and Language Production - Deborah Burke and Meredith Shafto How Many Levels of Processing Are There in Lexical Access? - Alfonso Caramazza Lexical Access in Aphasic and Nonaphasic Speakers - Gary Dell et al Making Sense of Syntax: Number agreement in sentence production - Kathleen Eberhard, J. Cooper Cutting and Kathryn Bock The Spatial and Temporal Signatures of Word Production Components - Peter Indefrey and Willem Levelt Phonological Priming Effects on Word Retrieval and Tip-Of-The-Tongue Experiences in Younger and Older Adults - Lori James and Deborah Burke A Theory of Lexical Access in Speech Production - Willem Levelt, Ardi Roelofs and Antje Meyer VOLUME 2 Structural Priming: A critical review - Martin Pickering and Victor Ferreira Grammatical Gender Is on the Tip of Italian Tongues - Gabriella Vigliocco, Tiziana Antonini and Merrill Garrett The Interplay of Meaning, Sound, and Syntax in Sentence Production - Gabriella Vigliocco and Robert Hartsuiker Part Two: Recognition and Comprehension The Influence of Age of Acquisition in Word Reading and Other Tasks: A never ending story? - Patrick Bonin et al Thematic Roles Assigned along the Garden Path Linger - Kiel Christianson et al DRC: A dual route cascaded model of visual word recognition and reading aloud - Max Coltheart et al Good-enough Representations in Language Comprehension - Fernanda Ferreira, Karl Bailey and Vittoria Ferraro Processing Local Transitions versus Long-distance Syntactic Hierarchies - Angela Friederici Representation and Competition in the Perception of Spoken Words - M. Gareth Gaskell and William Marslen-Wilson VOLUME 3 Computing the Meanings of Words in Reading: Cooperative division of labor between visual words and phonological processes - Michael Harm and Mark Seidenberg Integration of Multiple Speech Segmentation Cues: A hierarchical framework - Sven Mattys, Laurence White and James Melhorn Attractor Dynamics in Word Recognition: Converging evidence from errors by normal subjects, dyslexic patients and a connectionist model - Peter McLeod, Tim Shallice and David Plaut Serial Mechanisms in Lexical Access: The rank hypothesis - Wayne Murray and Ken Forster Shortlist B: A Bayesian model of continuous speech recognition - Dennis Norris and James McQueen Toward a Mechanistic Psychology of Dialogue - Martin Pickering and Simon Garrod VOLUME 4 Understanding Normal and Impaired Word Reading: Computational principles in quasi-regular domains - David Plaut et al The E-Z Reader Model of Eye Movement Control in Reading: Comparisons to other models - Erik Reichle, Keith Rayner and Alexander Pollatsek Does Lexical Information Influence the Perceptual Restoration of Phonemes? - Arthur Samuel Eye Movements and Spoken Language Comprehension: Effects of visual context on syntactic ambiguity resolution - Michael Spivey et al Part Three: Learning to Read Reading Acquisition, Phonology, and Dyslexia: Insights from a connectionist model - Michael Harm and Mark Seidenberg Developmental Dyslexia: The cerebellar deficit hypothesis - Roderick Nicolson, Angela Fawcett and Paul Dean Reading Acquisition, Developmental Dyslexia, and Skilled Reading Across Languages: A psycholinguistic grain size theory - Johannes Ziegler and Usha Goswami VOLUME 5 Part Four: Representation Domain-specific Knowledge Systems in the Brain: The animate-inanimate distinction - Alfons Caramazza and Jennifer Shelton Distinctive Features Hold a Privileged Status in the Computation of Word Meaning: Implications for theories of semantic memory - George Cree, Chris McNorgan and Ken McRae The Bilingual Brain: Cerebral representation of languages - Franco Fabbro Symbol Grounding and Meaning: A comparison of high-dimensional and embodied theories of meaning - Arthur Glenberg and David Robertson The Neurology of Syntax: Language use without Broca's area - Yosef Grodzinsky On Broca, Brains, and Binding: A new framework - Peter Hagoort A Solution to Plato's Problem: The latent semantic analysis theory of acquisition, induction, and representation of knowledge - Thomas Landauer and Susan Dumais Reassessing Working Memory: Comment on Just and Carpenter (1992) and Waters and Caplan (1996) - Maryellen MacDonald and Morten Christiansen Rules or Connections in Past-tense Inflections: What does the evidence rule out? - James McClelland and Karalyn Patterson Toward a Mechanistic Psychology of Dialogue - Martin Pickering and Simon Garrod The Myth of the Visual Word Form Area - Cathy Price and Joseph Devlin Structure and Deterioration of Semantic Memory: A neuropsychological and computational investigation - Timothy Rogers et al Grounding Words in Perception and Action: Computational insights - Deb Roy Networks Are Not 'Hidden Rules' - Mark Seidenberg and Jeffrey Elman Updating Situation Models - Rolf Zwaan and Carol Madden VOLUME 6 Part Five: Development Precis of How Children Learn the Meaning of Words - Paul Bloom Probabilistic Models of Language Processing and Acquisition - Nick Chater and Christopher Manning Human Simulations of Lexical Acquisition - Jane Gillette et al Language Deficits and Genetic Factors - Myrna Gopnik Specific Language Impairment: A deficit in grammar or processing? - Marc Joanisse and Mark Seidenberg Frequent Frames As a Cue for Grammatical Categories in Child Directed Speech - Toben Mintz The Past and Future of the Past Tense And Reply - Steven Pinker and Michael Ullman Language Acquisition in the Absence of Explicit Negative Evidence: How important is starting small? - Douglas Rohde and David Plaut Statistical Learning by 8-month-old Infants - Jenny Saffran, Richard Aslin and Elissa Newport Do Young Children Have Adult Syntactic Competence? - Michael Tomasello Other Topics: Animals, Evolution, and Language and Thought Does Language Shape Thought? Mandarin and English speakers' conceptions of time - Lera Boroditsky Numerical Thought With and Without Words: Evidence from indigenous Australian children - Brian Butterworth et al On the Origins of Modernity: Was autonomous speech the critical factor? - Michael Corballis Computational Constraints on Syntactic Processing in a Nonhuman Primate - W. Tecumseh Fitch and Marc Hauser The Faculty of Language: What is it, who has it, and how did it evolve? - Marc Hauser, Noam Chomsky and W. Tecumseh Fitch