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NetWordS 2015: Pisa, Italy
- Vito Pirrelli, Claudia Marzi, Marcello Ferro:

Proceedings of the NetWordS Final Conference on Word Knowledge and Word Usage: Representations and Processes in the Mental Lexicon, Pisa, Italy, March 30 - April 1, 2015. CEUR Workshop Proceedings 1347, CEUR-WS.org 2015 - Olivier Bonami, Sacha Beniamine:

Implicative structure and joint predictiveness. 4-9 - Emmanuel Keuleers, Pawel Mandera, Michaël A. Stevens, Marc Brysbaert:

Of crowds and corpora: a marriage of measures. 10-12 - Reza Falahati, Chiara Bertini:

Perception of gesturally distinct consonants in Persian. 13-18 - Hélène Giraudo, Madeleine Voga:

Words matter more than morphemes: evidence from masked priming with bound-stem stimuli. 19-23 - Giulia Bracco, Basilio Calderone, Chiara Celata:

Phonotactic probabilities in Italian simplex and complex words: a fragment priming study. 24-28 - Jim Blevins, Petar Milin, Michael Ramscar:

Zipfian discrimination. 29-31 - Gero Kunter:

Effects of processing complexity in perception and production. The case of English comparative alternation. 32-36 - Claudia Marzi, Marcello Ferro, Vito Pirrelli:

Lexical emergentism and the "frequency-by-regularity" interaction. 37-41 - Sebastian Padó, Britta D. Zeller, Jan Snajder:

Morphological priming in German: the word is not enough (or is it?). 42-45 - François Morlane-Hondère:

What can distributional semantic models tell us about part-of relations? 46-50 - Ting Zhao, Victoria A. Murphy:

Modeling lexical effects in language production: where have we gone wrong? 51-57 - Jens Fleischhauer:

Activating attributes in frames. 58-62 - Melanie J. Bell, Martin Schäfer:

Modelling semantic transparency in English compound nouns. 63-65 - Haim Dubossarsky, Yulia Tsvetkov, Chris Dyer, Eitan Grossman:

A bottom up approach to category mapping and meaning change. 66-70 - Maria Rosenberg, Ingmarie Mellenius:

What NN compounding in child language tells us about categorization. 71-75 - Fabio Montermini:

Using distributional data to explore derivational under-markedness: a study of the event/property polysemy in nominalization. 76-80 - Dimitrios Alikaniotis, John N. Williams:

A distributional semantics approach to implicit language learning. 81-84 - Anna Anastassiadis-Symeonidis:

Suffixation and the expression of space and time in modern Greek. 85-90 - Alessandra Zarcone, Sebastian Padó, Alessandro Lenci:

Same same but different: type and typicality in a distributional model of complement coercion. 91-94 - Jukka Hyönä, Minna Koski, Alexander Pollatsek:

Identifying existing and novel compound words in reading Finnish: an eye movement study. 95-97 - Paolo Canal, Francesca Pesciarelli, Francesco Vespignani, Nicola Molinaro, Cristina Cacciari:

Electrophysiological correlates idioms comprehension: semantic composition does not follow lexical retrieval. 98-101 - Sobh Chahboun, Valentin Vulchanov, David Saldana, Hendrik Eshuis, Mila Vulchanova:

Metaphorical priming in a lexical decision task in high functioning autism. 102-105 - Barbara Leone Fernandez, Manuel Perea, Marta Vergara-Martínez:

ERP correlates of letter-case in visual word recognition. 106-108 - Pier Marco Bertinetto, Chiara Celata, Luigi Talamo:

Morphotactic effects on the processing of Italian derivatives. 109-111 - Tatiana Iakovleva, Anna Piasecki, Ton Dijkstra:

Are you reading what I am reading? The impact of contrasting alphabetic scripts on reading English. 112-116 - Dániel Czégel, Zsolt Lengyel, Csaba Pléh:

A study of relations between associative structure and morphological structure of Hungarian words. 117-119 - Hélène Giraudo, Serena Dal Maso:

Suffix perceptual salience in morphological processing: evidence from Italian. 120-123 - Nana Huang:

A user-based approach to Spanish-speaking L2 acquisition of Chinese applicative operation. 124-127 - Hélène Giraudo, Karla Orihuela:

Visual word recognition of morphologically complex words: effects of prime word and root frequency. 128-131 - Jana Hasenäcker, Elisabeth Beyersmann, Sascha Schroeder:

Language proficiency moderates morphological priming in children and adults. 132-135 - Natalia Slioussar, Anastasia Chuprina:

Grouping morphologically complex words in the mental lexicon: evidence from Russian verbs and nouns. 136-139 - Radovan Garabík, Radoslav Brída:

Extraction and analysis of proper nouns in Slovak texts. 140-143 - Alessandro Lenci, Gianluca Lebani, Marco S. G. Senaldi, Sara Castagnoli, Francesca Masini, Malvina Nissim:

Mapping the constructicon with SYMPAThy. Italian word combinations between fixedness and productivity. 144-149 - Debela Tesfaye, Carita Paradis:

On the use of antonyms and synonyms from a domain perspective. 150-154 - Rosario Caballero, Iraide Ibarretxe-Antuñano:

From physical to metaphorical motion: a cross-genre approach. 155-157 - Ida Raffaelli, Barbara Kerovec:

'Taste' and its conceptual extensions: the example of Croatian root kus/kuš and Turkish root tat. 158-160 - Javier E. Díaz-Vera:

Love in the time of the corpora. Preferential conceptualizations of love in world Englishes. 161-165 - Cristina Cacciari, Francesca Pesciarelli, Tania Gamberoni, Fabio Ferlazzo:

Is black always the opposite of white? The comprehension of antonyms in schizophrenia and in healthy participants. 166-171 - Simon De Deyne, Steven Verheyen:

Using network clustering to uncover the taxonomic and thematic structure of the mental lexicon. 172-176 - Michael Richter, Jürgen Hermes:

Classification of German verbs using nouns in argument positions and aspectual features. 177-181 - Maja Andel, Jelena Radanovic, Laurie Beth Feldman, Petar Milin:

Processing of cognates in Croatian as L1 and German as L2. 182-186 - Camilla Hellum Foyn, Mila Vulchanova, Rik Eshuis:

The role of grammar factors and visual context in Norwegian children's pronoun resolution. 187-188

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