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29 October 2019
Saskia Mooijman en Tim Zee winnen schrijfwedstrijd IMPRS
De IMPRS voor Taalwetenschappen traint studenten om te schrijven over taalonderzoek voor het grote publiek middels een jaarlijkse schrijfwedstrijd. De IMPRS-studenten krijgen les van…
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Pioneers of Psycholinguistics
Pioneers of Psycholinguistics
- 3 December 2019 15:45 - 17:00ColloquiumMax Planck Institute
MPI colloquium Gesa Hartwigsen (MPI Leipzig)
Plasticity in the Language Network
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31 October 2019
People with autism have a more symmetrical brain
Do people with autism have differently organised brains? A large-scale MRI study, published in Nature Communications, reports fewer differences between the right and left hemispheres in people with…
- 13 February 2020 14:30 - 16:00DefenceRadboud University Nijmegen
IMPRS Doctoral Defence: James Trujillo
Movement speaks for itself: The neural and kinematic dynamics of communicative action and gesture
- 20 January 2020 14:30 - 16:00DefenceRadboud University Nijmegen
IMPRS Doctoral Defence: Valeria Mongelli
The role of neural feedback in language unification: How awareness affects combinatorial processing
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06 November 2019
Merel Maslowski will defend her thesis Thursday 12th of December 2019
On Thursday 12th of December 2019, at 11.00, Merel Maslowski will defend her thesis entitled "Fast speech can sound slow: Effects of contextual speech rate on word recognition" in the Senaatszaal of…
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Program Opening Jerome Bruner Library
Program Opening Jerome Bruner Library
- 28 January 2020 12:30 - 14:00DefenceRadboud University Nijmegen
IMPRS Doctoral Defence: Ferdy Hubers
Two of a kind: Idiomatic expressions in native speakers and second language learners
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Data protection information Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics Facebook
Data protection information Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics Facebook
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23 September 2015
Ig Nobel prize for MPI researchers
MPI researchers Mark Dingemanse, Francisco Torreira and Nick Enfield have won a coveted Ig Nobel Prize for their work which shows that ‘Huh?’—a word people use when they missed what someone just said…
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