Web-enabled Papers
- Baese, M., & Goldrick, M. (in press). Mechanisms of interaction in
speech production. Language and Cognitive Processes.
(manuscript
version,pdf).
- Goldrick, M., & Larson, M. (in press). Constraints on the
acquisition of variation. In C. Fougeron & M. D'Imperio (Eds.) Papers
in Laboratory Phonology 10: Variation, Detail and Representation.
Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
(manuscript
version,pdf)
- Lee, Y., & Goldrick, M. (in press).
The emergence of sub-syllabic
representations. Journal of Memory and Language.
(manuscript version,pdf)
- Goldrick, M. (2008).
Does
like attract like? Exploring the
relationship between errors and representational structure in
connectionist networks. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 25,
287-313.
(manuscript version,pdf)
- Goldrick, M., Costa, A., & Schiller, N. O. (2008).
Situating
language production within the matrix of human cognition: The state of
the art in language production research. Language and Cognitive
Processes, 23, 489-494.
(manuscript version,
pdf)
Introduction to a special
issue of Language and Cognitive Processes
on language production, based on presentations at the 3rd International
Workshop on Language Production
- Goldrick, M., & Larson, M. (2008). Phonotactic
probability influences speech production. Cognition, 107, 1155-1164.
(manuscript
version,pdf)
Supplementary data on
relative onset frequency of /f/ and /s/
- Troutman, C., Clark, B., & Goldrick, M. (2008). Social networks
and intraspeaker variation during periods of language change.
Proceedings of the 31st Annual Penn Linguistics Colloquium (Penn
Working Papers in Linguistics, 14.1).
(manuscript
version,pdf)
- Clark, B., Goldrick, M., & Konopka, K. (2008). Language change as
a source of word order correlations. In Eckardt, R., Jäger, G., &
Veenstra, T. (Eds.) Variation, selection, development: Probing the
evolutionary model of language change(pp. 75-102). Berlin: Mouton de
Gruyter.
(manuscript
version,pdf)
- Goldrick, M. (2007). Connectionist principles in theories of
speech production. In M. G. Gaskell (Ed.) The Oxford handbook of
psycholinguistics (pp. 515-530). Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
(manuscript version,pdf)
-
Goldrick, M. (2007). Constraint interaction:
A lingua franca for stochastic theories of language. In C. T.
Schutze & V. S. Ferreira &
(Eds.) The state of the art in speech error research: Proceedings of
the LSA Institute workshop (MITWPL vol. 53, pp. 95-114). Cambridge,
MA: MIT Working Papers in Linguistics.
- Goldrick, M., & Rapp, B. (2007).
Lexical and post-lexical
phonological representations in spoken production.
Cognition,102, 219-260.
(manuscript
version, pdf)
- Goldrick, M. (2006). Limited interaction in speech production:
Chronometric, speech error, and neuropsychological evidence. Language
and Cognitive Processes, 21, 817-855.
(manuscript version, pdf)
- Goldrick, M., & Blumstein, S. E. (2006).
Cascading activation
from phonological planning to articulatory processes: Evidence from tongue
twisters. Language and Cognitive Processes, 21, 649-683.
(manuscript version,
pdf)
- Rapp, B., & Goldrick, M. (2006).
Speaking words: Contributions of cognitive neuropsychological
research. Cognitive Neuropsychology,
23, 39-73.
(manuscript
version,pdf)
- Goldrick, M. (2004). Phonological
features and phonotactic constraints in speech production. Journal
of Memory and Language, 51, 586-603.
-
Rapp, B., & Goldrick, M. (2004). Feedback
by any other name is still interactivity: A reply to Roelofs' comment on
Rapp & Goldrick (2000). Psychological Review, 111,
573-578. (abstract, html)
-
Davidson, L. & Goldrick, M. (2003).
Tense, agreement and defaults in child Catalan: An Optimality Theoretic
analysis. In S. Montrul (ed.) Selected papers of the 4th
conference on the acquisition of Spanish and Portuguese as first and
second languages. Cambridge, MA: Cascadilla Press.
- Goldrick, M. (2002). Patterns in
sound, patterns in mind: Phonological regularities in speech production.
PhD dissertation, Johns Hopkins University.
short (single spaced) version.
- Folk, J. R., Rapp, B., & Goldrick, M. (2002).
The interaction of lexical and sublexical information in spelling: What's
the point? Cognitive Neuropsychology, 19, 653-671.(Abstract,
access to reprints)
-
Goldrick, M. & Rapp, B. (2002).
A restricted interaction account
(RIA) of spoken word production: The best of both worlds.
Aphasiology, 16, 20-55.(Abstract, access to reprints)
-
Goldrick, M. (2001). Turbid
output representations and the unity of opacity. in M. Hirotani, A. Coetzee, N. Hall, and
J.-Y. Kim (eds.), Proceedings of the Northeast Linguistics Society (NELS) 30 (volume I, pp.
231-245). Amherst, MA: GLSA. (published version, pdf)
-
Rapp, B. & Goldrick, M. (2000).
Discreteness and interactivity in
spoken word production. Psychological Review, 107, 460-499.
(abstract, html)
HTML, Full-text (access to PsycArticles required)
Web-enabled Conference Presentations
- Goldrick, M. (2008). A gradient harmonic grammar account of
lexically-conditioned phonetic variation. Paper presented at the
Linguistic Society of America annual meeting, Chicago, IL. talk
slides(pdf)
- Engstler, C., & Goldrick, M. (2007) Lexically
conditioned
phonetic
variation across languages. Poster presented at the Fourth International Workshop on
Language Production, Muenster, Germany. poster(pdf)
- Baese, M., Poepsel, T., & Goldrick, M. (2007). Moving new words into
the neighborhood: A preliminary report. Poster presented at the Fourth
International Workshop on Language Production, Muenster, Germany.poster(pdf)
- Goldrick, M., Folk, J., and Rapp, B. (2007). Mrs. Malaprop's
neighborhood: Using word errors to reveal principles of lexical
organization. Poster presented at Architectures and Mechanisms for
Language Processing (AMLaP), Turku, Finland.poster(pdf)
- Goldrick, M., & Daland, R. (2007). Linking grammatical principles
with experimental speech production data: Insights from Harmonic Grammar
networks. Paper presented at Experimental Approaches to Optimality
Theory, Ann Arbor, MI.talk
slides(pdf)
-
Goldrick, M., Hale, J., Mathis, D. & Smolensky, P. (1999). On
realizing the dual route in a single route. Poster presented at the
Cognitive Science Society annual meeting, Vancouver.