Zahlreiche wissenschaftliche Beiträge unserer Fachrichtung wurden bei der Cognitive Science Society (CogSci) 2026 angenommen. Herzlichen Glückwunsch an alle Autorinnen und Autoren!
- "Reflecting the Readers of Today: An Update of the American English Author Recognition Task" von Ana Celmare, Ted Sanders, Merel Scholman
- "Referring Effectively to a Group of Objects" von Emilia Ellsiepen, Alexandra Mayn, Natalia Bila, Vera Demberg
- "Expectation-based Linearization: Evidence from German Word-Order and Information Structure" von Torsten Kai Jachmann, Francesca Delogu, Matthew W. Crocker, Heiner Drenhaus
- "The influence of dependency length on expectancy: Evidence from reading times and ERPs." von Xinyue Jia, Heiner Drenhaus, Torsten Kai Jachmann, Francesca Delogu, Matthew W. Crocker
- "LLMs Electrified: Early and deep layers differentially correlate with the N400 and P600 in language comprehension" von Benedict Krieger, Matthew W. Crocker, Harm Brouwer
- "Modeling individual and item differences in atypicality inferences with ACT-R" von Guifu Liu, Vera Demberg
- "Speech Cues Influence the Interpretation of Iconic Gestures Even When Unrelated" von Laura Pissani, Vera Demberg
- "Effects of linguistic context and reading abilities on processing of unknown words" von Margarita Ryzhova, Emilia Ellsiepen, Vera Demberg
- "Prediction-by-Production is not Winner-Takes-All: Evidence from Reading Times and Brain Potentials" von Miriam Schulz, Masato Nakamura, Francesca Delogu, Matthew W. Crocker