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We undertake fundamental research into the psychological, social and biological foundations of #language | Onderzoeksinstituut voor #taal, van genetica tot gedrag |
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics






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What 5000 babies can tell us about developing minds and how to study them. New paper by Brianna T. M. McMillan & al. with @chbergma.bsky.social doi.org/10.1038/s44271-026-00477-w
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A decade of ManyBabies research, testing thousands of babies across hundreds of labs, has shown that some, but not all findings in infant research replicate well. Collectively, these projects have sho...
What 5000 babies can tell us about developing minds and how to study them - Communications Psychology
doi.org
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
Contextual F0 cues can outweigh talker F0 cues in fricative perception. New paper by Orhun Uluşahin, Hans Rutger Bosker, Antje S. Meyer & James M. McQueen doi.org/10.3758/s13414-026-03246-3
Lifespan trajectories of asymmetry in white matter tracts. New paper by Sam Bogdanov & al. with @stephforkel.bsky.social doi.org/10.1002/hbm.70519
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Contextual F0 cues can outweigh talker F0 cues in fricative perception - Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics
Listeners use information in the speech signal as well as linguistic and real-world knowledge to tackle the immense variability of speech. Here, we focus on the use of contextual and talker-bound fundamental frequency (F0) cues during the perception of voiceless fricatives’ center of gravity (CoG). In Experiment 1, Dutch participants heard the sentence Nu komt het woord ?ok (“Now comes the word ?ok”) where “?” denotes a fricative from a synthetic /s-ʃ/ continuum in three carrier F0 conditions (low, mid, high), and indicated whether they heard the high-CoG /sɔk/ “sock” or the low-CoG /ʃɔk/ “(to) trudge.” We found a contrastive effect of context F0 on CoG perception whereby hearing a high F0 carrier sentence led to a lower fricative CoG perception. In Experiments 2a and b, an exposure phase was added where participants either heard a low or a high F0-shifted talker. At test, all participants heard fixed-F0 words /?ɔk/ and indicated whether they heard sok or sjok. Talker F0 guided participants’ responses in both experiments, but across more trials in Experiment 2b than in Experiment 2a. In Experiment 3, combining context and talker manipulations, two groups of participants heard either a low or a high F0 talker in exposure, and both low and high F0-shifted carrier sentences at test. There was a large context F0 effect, but crucially, no talker F0 effect. Overall, we found evidence that both contextual and talker-bound F0 cues have contrastive effects on fricative perception, and that contextual cues, when present and sufficiently reliable, can outweigh talker cues.
doi.org
(A) Large-scale lifespan modeling of white matter asymmetry. Diffusion MRI data from 35,000+ individuals (0-100 years) across 50 cohorts were used to generate normative lifespan trajectories of white...
doi.org
Lifespan Trajectories of Asymmetry in White Matter Tracts
Charting new paths in the study of kin term acquisition. New paper by Marisa Casillas, Yuchen Jin, & Stephen C. Levinson doi.org/10.1111/tops.70056
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics