Selected Publications
- Hanulikova, A. (forthcoming). Do faces speak volumes? Social expectations in speech comprehension and evaluation across three age groups.
- Engel, A., Hanulíková, A. (2020). Speaking style modulates morphosyntactic expectations in young and older adults: Evidence from a sentence repetition task. Discourse Processes 57(9),749-769. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/0163853X.2020.1777497
- Hanulíková, A. (2019). Bewertung und Grammatikalität regionaler Syntax. Eine empirische Untersuchung zur Rolle der SprecherInnen und HörerInnen. Linguistik Online, 98(5), 197-218. https://doi.org/10.13092/lo.98.5936
- Levy, H., Konieczny, L., Hanulíková, A. (2019). Processing of unfamiliar accents in monolingual and bilingual children: Effects of type and amount of accent experience. Journal of Child Language, 46/2, 368-392. DOI:10.1017/S030500091800051X
- Hanulíková, A., Carreiras, M. (2015). Electrophysiology of subject-verb agreement mediated by speaker’s gender. Frontiers in Psychology: Cognition 6:1396. http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01396
FRIAS Project
Diversity in language and cognition
Language use is greatly influenced by a variety of individual characteristics of the communication partners, such as age, gender, or the linguistic and/or cultural background. A better understanding of the impact of such diversity dimensions on language processing is crucial, since institutions strive for creating an inclusive environment, but struggle with the challenges posed by the resulting diversity. This research focus aims to explore how the experimental language sciences can be enriched by including individual person characteristics. Neuro- and psycholinguistic research on the respective diversity dimensions has been conducted in rather separate research communities. In contrast, scholars in gender studies have stressed the importance of integrating the dimensions and considering them in concert. Intersectionality, as this approach is termed, has been applied in qualitative studies on inequality and discrimination in society, but its potential for quantitative studies on language has not yet been discussed. By bringing together researchers from linguistics, cognitive science and gender studies we aim to promote the interdisciplinary exchange about diversity in language.