
Group leader
Post doc
PhD students
MSc students
Pedro Alonso Gonzalez
Julia Niehaus
Research assistant
Student assistant
Rafael Zampakas
Alumni
Chin Yang Shapland
Marjolein van Donkelaar
Mariska Barendse
Laurence Howe (co-supervision with University of Bristol, Professor George Davey Smith and Dr Sarah Lewis)
Janne Vermeulen
Jeffrey van der Ven
Mitchell Olislagers
Celeste Figaroa
Tanguy Rubat du Mérac
Simone van den Bedem
Fenja Schlag
Anh Nguyen
Paola Moreno Ancalmo
Displaying 1 - 20 of 15531
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Zora, H., Bowin, H., Heldner, M., Riad, T., & Hagoort, P. (in press). Lexical and information structure functions of prosody and their relevance for spoken communication: Evidence from psychometric and EEG data. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
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Bavaresco, A., Bernardi, R., Bertolazzi, L., Elliott, D., Fernández, R., Gatt, A., Ghaleb, E., Giulianelli, M., Hanna, M., Koller, A., Martins, A. F. T., Mondorf, P., Neplenbroek, V., Pezzelle, S., Plank, B., Schlangen, D., Suglia, A., Surikuchi, A. K., Takmaz, E., & Testoni, A. (in press). LLMs instead of human judges? A large scale empirical study across 20 NLP evaluation tasks. In Proceedings of the 63rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL 2025).
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Ohlerth, A.-K., Lavrador, J. P., Vergani, F., & Forkel, S. J. (in press). Combining anTMS and tractography for language mapping: An integrated paradigm for neurosurgical planning. In S. M. Krieg, & T. Picht (
Eds. ), Navigated Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation in Neurosurgery. Berlin: Springer. -
Corps, R. E., & Meyer, A. S. (in press). Multiple repetitions lead to the long-term elimination of the word frequency effect. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition.
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Kabak, B., & Zora, H. (in press). Psycholinguistics and Turkish: Prosodic representations and processing. In L. Johanson (
Ed. ), Encyclopedia of Turkic Languages and Linguistics. Leiden: Brill.Abstract
Psycholinguistic investigations provide invaluable empirical utility in theorizing and typologizing phonological phenomena. Instrumental approaches to the sound structure of Turkish have proven to be no exception here, contributing independent and multi-faceted evidence towards theory building and testing. Two areas of Turkish phonology in relation to suprasegmental structure and prominence patterns, namely word-level prosody (Section 2) and prominence and rhythmic phenomena at the level of the sentence and beyond (Section 3) have particularly fueled psycholinguistically motivated empirical studies. This chapter will approach representational and processing-related issues in each of these and provide a review of pertinent perception and production studies, touching upon phonetic and developmental investigations insofar as they have implications for mental representations or processing. -
Hustá, C., Meyer, A. S., & Drijvers, L. (in press). Using rapid invisible frequency tagging (RIFT) to probe the attentional distribution between speech planning and comprehension. Neurobiology of Language.
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Özyürek, A. (in press). Multimodal language, diversity and neuro-cognition. In D. Bradley, K. Dziubalska-Kołaczyk, C. Hamans, I.-H. Lee, & F. Steurs (
Eds. ), Contemporary Linguistics Integrating Languages, Communities, and Technologies: Special edition prepared for the participants of the 21st International Congress of Linguists (ICL). BRILL Press. -
Sotiropoulos, S. N., Thiebaut de Schotten, M., Haber, S. N., & Forkel, S. J. (in press). Cross-species neuroanatomy in primates using tractography. Brain Structure & Function.
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Slonimska, A., & Özyürek, A. (in press). Methods to study evolution of iconicity in sign languages. In L. Raviv, & C. Boeckx (
Eds. ), The Oxford Handbook of Approaches to Language Evolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press. -
Hagoort, P. (in press). Fodor, Bruner and beyond. Human Arenas: The Max Planck Papers.
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Bauer, B. L. M. (in press). Evolution of counting systems. In E. Aldridge, A. Breitbarth, K. É. Kiss, A. Ledgeway, J. Salmon, & A. Simonenko (
Eds. ), Wiley Blackwell companion to diachronic linguistics. Oxford: Wiley Blackwell. -
Rubio-Fernandez, P. (in press). Cultural evolutionary pragmatics: An empirical approach to the relation between language and social cognition. In B. Geurts, & R. Moore (
Eds. ), The Oxford Handbook of Evolutionary Pragmatics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. -
Quaresima, A., Duarte, R., Fitz, H., Hagoort, P., & Petersson, K. M. (in press). Nonlinear dendritic integration supports Up-Down states in single neurons. The Journal of Neuroscience.
Abstract
Changes in the activity profile of cortical neurons are due to phenomena at the scale of local and long-range networks. Accordingly, the states of cortical neurons and their, often abrupt, transitions – a phenomenon known as Up/Down states – are attributed to variations in the afferent neurons’ activity. However, cellular physiology and morphology may also play a role. This study examines the impact of dendritic nonlinearities, in the form of voltage-gated NMDA receptors, on the response of cortical neurons to balanced excitatory/inhibitory synaptic inputs. Using a neuron model with two segregated dendritic compartments, we compare cells with and without dendritic nonlinearities. Our analysis shows that NMDA receptors boost somatic firing in the balanced condition and increase the correlation of membrane potentials across the three compartments of the neuron model. Then we introduce controlled fluctuations in excitatory inputs and quantify the ensuing bimodality of the somatic membrane potential. We show that dendritic nonlinearities are crucial for detecting these fluctuations and initiating Up-Down states whose shape and statistics closely resemble electrophysiological data. Our results provide new insights into the mechanisms underlying cortical bistability and highlight the complex interplay between dendritic integration and network dynamics in shaping neuronal behavior.
Significance statement In several physiological states, such as sleep or quiet wakefulness, the membrane of cortical cells shows a stereotypical bistability. The cell is either fully depolarized and ready to spike or in a silent, hyperpolarized state. This dynamics, known as Up-Down states, has often been attributed to changes in the network activity. However, whether cell-specific properties, such as dendritic nonlinearity, have a role in driving the neuron’s bistability remains unclear. This study examines the issue using a model of a pyramidal cell and reveals that the presence of dendritic NMDA receptors, drives the up-down states in response to small fluctuations in the network activity. -
Snijders, T. M., & Menn, K. H. (in press). Maturational constraints on tracking of temporal attention in infant language acquisition. In L. Meyer, & A. Strauss (
Eds. ), Rhythms of Speech and Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Additional information
link to preprint -
Araújo, S., Reis, A., Faísca, L., & Petersson, K. M. (in press). Brain sensitivity to words and the “word recognition potential”. In D. Marques, & J. H. Toscano (
Eds. ), De las neurociencias a la neuropsicologia: el estúdio del cerebro humano. Barranquilla, Colombia: Corporación Universitaria Reformada. -
Ning, M., Li, M., Su, J., Jia, H., Liu, L., Beneš, M., Salah, A. A., & Ertugrul, I. O. (in press). DCTdiff: Intriguing properties of image generative modeling in the DCT space. In Proceedings of the Forty-Second International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML 2025).
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Hammarström, H., & Parkvall, M. (in press). Basic Constituent Order in Pidgin and Creole Languages: Inheritance or Universals? Journal of Language Contact.
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Bauer, B. L. M. (in press). Latin varieties and the study of language. Social stratification in language evolution. In Latin vulgaire - latin tardif XIV. Turnhout: Brepols.
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De Vos, C. (in press). Language of perception in Kata Kolok. In A. Majid, & S. C. Levinson (
Eds. ), The Oxford Handbook of the Language of Perception. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Abstract
This study describes the sensory lexicon on the domains of colour, taste, shape, smell and touch of a rural sign language called Kata Kolok (KK). Taste was highly codable for Kata Kolok signers, who used a dedicated set of signs and facial expressions to indicate each of the taste stimuli. The second most codable perceptual domain was shape, for which signers often used classifiers and tracing gestures that reflected the shape of the object directly. Smell had a comparatively intermediate level of codability, but this was due, for the most part, to the use of evaluative terms. Although Kata Kolok has a dedicated set of colour signs, these leave large parts of the colour spectrum unnamed, resulting in low degrees of codability in this sensory domain. Unnamed colours were frequently described by iconic-indexical forms such as object labelling and pointing strategies. Touch was the least codable domain for Kata Kolok, which resulted in a wide range of iconically motivated constructions including a restricted set of domain-specific lexical signs, classifiers, tracing gestures, object labelling, and general evaluative terms. -
Sümer, B., & Özyürek, A. (in press). Action bias in describing object locations by signing children. Sign Language and Linguistics.
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