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Posts by João Veríssimo

... and a two-day post-conference workshop on 9–10 July on "Bayesian statistics for word processing research". This is directed at early-career researchers, and free to attend for conference participants!

2 months ago 3 0 0 0

… an invited symposium on "Emerging computational approaches to lexicon and morphology", with:

– Sol Lago @sollago.bsky.social (Goethe University Frankfurt)

– Evelina Leivada @evelinaleivada.bsky.social (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)

– Marco Marelli (University of Milano-Bicocca)

2 months ago 2 0 1 0
WoProc 2026 | 13th International Word Processing Conference Join WoProc 2026, the 13th International Word Processing Conference, in Lisbon, Portugal, from 6–8 July 2026.

We are pleased to welcome the following keynote speakers to WoProc 2026 in Lisbon:

– Davide Crepaldi (University of Pavia, Italy) @davidecrepaldi.bsky.social

– Jana Reifegerste (Georgetown University, USA)

www.woproc2026.com
Abstract submission by 14 Feb, final deadline 📢

We will also hold ...

2 months ago 5 1 1 0
WoProc 2026 | 13th International Word Processing Conference Join WoProc 2026, the 13th International Word Processing Conference, in Lisbon, Portugal, from 6–8 July 2026.

Final call for papers!📢

Deadline extended to 14 February 2026!

Join us in Lisbon next year for the International Word Processing Conference, on 6–8 July 2026. We welcome contributions on all aspects of word processing.
www.woproc2026.com

2 months ago 3 2 0 0
WoProc 2026 | 13th International Word Processing Conference Join WoProc 2026, the 13th International Word Processing Conference, in Lisbon, Portugal, from 6–8 July 2026.

Call for papers!📢

Join us in Lisbon next year for the International Word Processing Conference, on 6–8 July 2026!

We welcome contributions on all aspects of word processing. Submit by 6 Feb 2026!

www.woproc2026.com

3 months ago 1 2 0 0
WoProc 2026 | 13th International Word Processing Conference Join WoProc 2026, the 13th International Word Processing Conference, in Lisbon, Portugal, from 6–8 July 2026.

Call for papers!📢

Join us in Lisbon next year for the International Word Processing Conference, on 6–8 July 2026!

We welcome contributions on all aspects of word processing. Submit by 6 Feb 2026!

www.woproc2026.com

3 months ago 1 2 0 0

Proudly published with @andreaeyleen.bsky.social:

A metatheory of classical and modern connectionism. doi.org/10.1037/rev0...

We touch on what has been up with connectionism as a framework for computational modelling — & for everything it seems these days with AI and LLMs — pre-2010 vs post.

1/n

6 months ago 86 27 6 21
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Modelling time-resolved electrophysiological data with Bayesian generalised additive multilevel models Providing utility functions for fitting Bayesian generalised additive multilevel models (BGAMMs) to time-resolved data (e.g., M/EEG, pupillometry, mouse-tracking, etc) and identifying clusters.

If you analyse time-resolved data (M/EEG, iEEG, pupillometry, force recordings…) and feel limited by cluster-based permutation tests (CBPTs); especially when trying to determine when an effect starts or ends; you may want to try our new R package: lnalborczyk.github.io/neurogam/
#rstats #brms #EEG

4 months ago 74 32 6 1
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Stages in lexical decision: frequency attenuation in masked repetition priming is insensitive to prime duration This study investigates the controversial Frequency Attenuation Effect (FAE), examining whether masked repetition priming is sensitive to word frequency. Early findings suggesting no interaction ha...

📢 NEW PAPER OUT! We show that the masked frequency attenuation effect is real, but its magnitude is insensitive to prime duration. This strongly supports a two-stage model of word recognition.

www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....

#Psycholinguistics #CognitiveScience #WordRecognition #NYU #NYUAD

4 months ago 5 2 0 0
OSF

If you use divergence point analysis code from Stone et al. 2020 or 2021, note that we made a code revision recently, detailed in the Analysis folder: osf.io/exbmk/ Shouldn't majorly affect previous analyses, but the revised version should be used going forward.

6 months ago 5 1 1 0
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Josh Tenenbaum's inspiring keynote at #cogsci2025 on growing vs scaling AI, the big questions of cognitive science, and the many open questions for the field.

8 months ago 65 14 1 1

We welcome contributions on all aspects of word processing (submit by 23 Jan 2026)!

Very happy to announce these two fantastic keynotes:
- Davide Crepaldi @davidecrepaldi.bsky.social
- Jana Reifegerste

8 months ago 2 0 0 0
Preview
WoProc 2026 | 13th International Word Processing Conference Join WoProc 2026, the 13th International Word Processing Conference, in Lisbon, Portugal, from 6–8 July 2026.

SAVE THE DATE! Join us in Lisbon next year for the International Word Processing Conference (6–8 July 2026)!

WoProc continues the legacy of MoProc―a conference that, since 1999, has brought together researchers working on morphological processing.
www.woproc2026.com

8 months ago 4 1 1 1

maybe she's a proponent of the bootstrap-based method... 🤔

8 months ago 1 0 0 0

Instead, better tone identification was predicted by pitch acuity. This suggests that domain-general auditory processing―not universal phonological principles―is a more important determinant.

10 months ago 3 0 1 0
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L2 difficulties in the perception of Mandarin tones: Phonological universals or domain-general aptitude? | Bilingualism: Language and Cognition | Cambridge Core L2 difficulties in the perception of Mandarin tones: Phonological universals or domain-general aptitude?

New paper with Chao Zhou in BLC: doi.org/10.1017/S1366728925100114
What makes lexical tones challenging for L2 learners? Previous studies suggest that phonological universals are at play... In our perceptual study, we found little evidence for these universals.

10 months ago 9 3 1 0
Redirecting

How do memory retrieval and prediction work together during sentence comprehension?
We use computational modelling and visual world eye-tracking to unpack their interaction in German pronouns. New article led by Elise Oltrogge, together by João Veríssimo, and Umesh Patil: doi.org/10.1016/j.jm...

10 months ago 8 3 1 0
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Postdoc

🚀Postdoc position @unimarburg.bsky.social in the project:

"Bridging the Gap Between Verbal Psychological Theories & Formal Statistical Modeling with Large Language Models"
(funded by @volkswagenstiftung.de)

📅Start: 01.10.2025 | ⏳4 years
🔗 Apply now: uni-marburg.de/jhbCen
🔄 Thanks for sharing!

10 months ago 28 23 1 1
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A gentle introduction to Bayesian statistics, with applications to bilingualism research Bayesian analyses have been increasingly adopted in psychology and linguistics as an addition (or replacement) to traditional frequentist methods. However, Bayesian methods are not yet widely applied…

Preprint here: osf.io/preprints/ps...
(includes some goodies in the supp. materials, such as tips on speeding up model fitting.)

10 months ago 3 0 0 0

It's an intro to the foundational principles of Bayesian stats AND a practical tutorial on estimation and hypothesis testing using brms. I build up from simple regression to mixed-effects models.

10 months ago 1 0 1 0

New paper!
"A gentle introduction to bayesian statistics, with applications to bilingualism research", now out in LAB: doi.org/10.1075/lab....

10 months ago 7 1 1 0
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Ok frequentists, let’s call a truce. This has gone too far.

11 months ago 89 20 5 2
The 3rd Workshop on Eye Movements and the Assessment of Reading Comprehension 👁️📖

3rd Workshop on Eye Movements & the Assessment of Reading Comprehension 👁️📖

The full program with abstracts is now online!
🔗 tmalsburg.github.io/Comprehensio...

11 months ago 2 2 0 0
Table 1
Typology of traps, how they can be avoided, and what goes wrong if not avoided. Note that all traps in a sense constitute category errors (Ryle & Tanney, 2009) and the success-to-truth inference (Guest & Martin, 2023) is an important driver in most, if not all, of the traps.

Table 1 Typology of traps, how they can be avoided, and what goes wrong if not avoided. Note that all traps in a sense constitute category errors (Ryle & Tanney, 2009) and the success-to-truth inference (Guest & Martin, 2023) is an important driver in most, if not all, of the traps.

NEW paper! 💭🖥️

“Combining Psychology with Artificial Intelligence: What could possibly go wrong?”

— Brief review paper by @olivia.science & myself, highlighting traps to avoid when combining Psych with AI, and why this is so important. Check out our proposed way forward! 🌟💡

osf.io/preprints/ps...

11 months ago 348 105 15 25
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Interesting... Tried mgcv::rmvn() and mvnfast::rmvn(). Both seems to produce the same random numbers (with and without the perturbations in the cov matrix).

11 months ago 1 0 0 0
Four images to illustrate some prominent single-gene myths. Top left shows a photograph of a person deftly rolling their tongue into a U-shape. Top right shows a photograph of a person’s ear, highlighting the shape and features of the earlobe and cartilage. Bottom left shows a close-up photograph of a person’s eye, with a vivid blue colouration. Bottom right shows a photograph of a person poised to write with their left hand on the blank white page of a spiral-bound notebook.

Four images to illustrate some prominent single-gene myths. Top left shows a photograph of a person deftly rolling their tongue into a U-shape. Top right shows a photograph of a person’s ear, highlighting the shape and features of the earlobe and cartilage. Bottom left shows a close-up photograph of a person’s eye, with a vivid blue colouration. Bottom right shows a photograph of a person poised to write with their left hand on the blank white page of a spiral-bound notebook.

Remember when you first learned about genetics at school? All those fascinating examples of human traits that are each apparently determined by just a single gene? Time to check in on some of your favourites to see how they’re doing. 🧬🧵🧪 1/n

11 months ago 1321 611 52 89

right! mgcv can fit a binomial AR(1) model, but it's a little particular... you have to use bam() with discrete=T, for example (which, in turn, this precludes using something other than fREML)

11 months ago 0 0 0 0
OSF

package in the works! for now, you can source "OnsetDetection_Functions_0.4.7.R" from here and see the get_onset() examples in the analyses of Studies 1 and 2: osf.io/9ethq/files/... (note that the function still has some limitations, e.g., it only handles 1 random factor)

11 months ago 1 0 0 0

Interesting! We do fit a logistic GAMM with (temporal) autocorrelation... but we don't address the spatial autocorrelation at all. In any case, I think it's compatible? Our innovation is using posterior simulations to obtain a temporal CI, but there is some freedom in terms of the model building.

11 months ago 1 0 1 0

cool! we'd be super interested in hearing how well it works webcam VWP!

11 months ago 0 0 2 0