cached image

Gerard A.M. Kempen

Affiliations: 
Leiden University, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Leiden, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands 
Area:
psycholinguistics, language technology
Website:
http://www.gerardkempen.nl
Google:
"Gerard Kempen"
Bio:

(Show more)

Cross-listing: Neurotree

Children

Sign in to add trainee
Ineke Jonkersz grad student (Neurotree)
Wiwi Marat grad student Universitas Padjadjaran Bandung (Neurotree)
Cornelis (Cees) Wegman grad student 1979 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Eduard C.M. Hoenkamp grad student 1983 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Gerard L.J. Nas grad student 1983 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Wim H.J. van Bon grad student 1984 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Monica Meijsing grad student 1986 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Walter Daelemans grad student 1987 University of Louvain (Neurotree)
Guus Meijers grad student 1987 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Carel H. van Wijk grad student 1987 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Marijke Bergman grad student 1988 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Koenraad De Smedt grad student 1990 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Ton Dijkstra grad student 1990 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Ben Hofstede grad student 1992 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Ardi Roelofs grad student 1992 Radboud University Nijmegen
Edwin Bos grad student 1993 Leiden (Neurotree)
Theo G. Vosse grad student 1994 Leiden (Neurotree)
Carla Huls grad student 1995 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Jan-Willem van Aalst grad student 2001 Delft University of Technology (Neurotree)
Simone Sprenger grad student 2003 Radboud University Nijmegen (Neurotree)
Boban Arsenijevic grad student 2006 Leiden (LinguisTree)
Nomi Olsthoorn grad student 2007 Leiden (Neurotree)
Jan-Rouke Kuipers grad student 2008 Leiden (Neurotree)
Tineke M. Snijders grad student 2004-2009 Utrecht (Neurotree)
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Uddén J, Hultén A, Schoffelen JM, et al. (2022) Supramodal Sentence Processing in the Human Brain: fMRI Evidence for the Influence of Syntactic Complexity in More Than 200 Participants. Neurobiology of Language (Cambridge, Mass.). 3: 575-598
Kempen G, Harbusch K. (2019) Mutual attraction between high-frequency verbs and clause types with finite verbs in early positions: corpus evidence from spoken English, Dutch, and German Language, Cognition and Neuroscience. 34: 1140-1151
Kempen G, Harbusch K. (2018) A competitive mechanism selecting verb-second versus verb-final word order in causative and argumentative clauses of spoken Dutch: A corpus-linguistic study Language Sciences. 69: 30-42
Kuiper K, Bimesl N, Kempen G, et al. (2017) Initial vs. non-initial placement of agent constructions in spoken clauses: A corpus-based study of language production under time pressure Language Sciences. 64: 16-33
Velde Mvd, Kempen G, Harbusch K. (2015) Dative alternation and planning scope in spoken language: A corpus study on effects of verb bias in VO and OV clauses of Dutch Lingua. 165: 92-108
Kempen G. (2014) Prolegomena to a Neurocomputational Architecture for Human Grammatical Encoding and Decoding Neuroinformatics. 12: 111-142
Segaert K, Kempen G, Petersson KM, et al. (2013) Syntactic priming and the lexical boost effect during sentence production and sentence comprehension: an fMRI study. Brain and Language. 124: 174-83
Kempen G, Olsthoorn N, Sprenger S. (2012) Grammatical workspace sharing during language production and language comprehension: Evidence from grammatical multitasking Language and Cognitive Processes. 27: 345-380
Vosse T, Kempen G. (2009) The Unification Space implemented as a localist neural net: Predictions and error-tolerance in a constraint-based parser Cognitive Neurodynamics. 3: 331-346
Snijders TM, Vosse T, Kempen G, et al. (2009) Retrieval and unification of syntactic structure in sentence comprehension: an FMRI study using word-category ambiguity. Cerebral Cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991). 19: 1493-503
See more...