Our lab manager has been accepted to the PhD program in Cognitive Psychology at Drexel University! Allie will be working with my good friend and intellectual idol, Dr. Lila Chrysikou. Congratulations to Allie. I hope you know what you’re getting into!
Molly Ungrady is off to PhD land
Congratulations to Molly Ungrady!!! Our stalwart clinical technician and treatment administrator extraordinaire has been accepted to the Ph.D. program in Neuropsychology at Temple. She’ll be working with the amazing Dr. Tania Giovannetti.
another yuge eyetracking paper - this one in the journal, Psychology & Aging
Congratulations to Dr. Sarah Seligman-Rycroft and Tania Giovannetti!
Be on the lookout for:
Rycroft, S.S., Giovannetti, T., Shipley, T.F., Hulswit, J., Divers, R., Reilly, J. (in press). Windows to functional decline: Naturalistic eye movements in older and younger adults. Psychology and Aging.
YUGE new pupillometry methods paper in Behavior Research Methods
We characterized the human cognitive pupillary response. Yes, it was complicated. Yes, some reviewers and editors hated it. Yes, I’m psyched. This is some of the best science I have ever done. Congratulations are especially in order to our student co-authors, Savannah Jett and Seung Kim.
Jamie Reilly appointed Review Editor for Frontiers in Neurology: Stroke
Jamie is now a Review Editor for Frontiers in Neurology. He’ll be overseeing peer review for manuscripts related to language in stroke and primary progressive aphasia.
New R How-To Series
Visit our new R.How webpages for information on specific topics related to R statistical programming. These pages cover some of the thornier topics we have faced in our working group at Temple University. Feel free to suggest any content additions.
NIH R01 Project Grant Renewed for 5 Years
Five more years! I am thrilled to report that our language treatment grant DC013063 has been renewed from 2019-2024. I was so stressed out that I was eating crisco right out of the jar. Thanks to the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.
name change for the lab
We are now the Concepts and Cognition Laboratory. Parsimony.
New lab logo
What?! A new paper in Brain and Language
Yes it's true! We just published a tDCS and eyetracking study in Brain and Language. They said it couldn't be done. Actually, nobody would ever say that it couldn't be done. Anyone with the peculiar motivation to shock someone's brain, ask them to name a picture, and then film where their eyes go could publish this paper. Be on the lookout for this creative gem led by Drs. Richard Binney and Sameer Ashaie:
Binney RJ, Ashaie SA, Zuckerman BM, Hung J, & Reilly J (2018). A combined neurostimulation and eyetracking investigation of semantically-guided visual search in confrontation naming. Brain & Language.
Tirzah Sheppard off to Columbia University's summer public health program
I knew that our undergraduate research assistant, Tirzah Sheppard, was smart, but holy cow! Tirzah has been accepted to Columbia University's Summer Public Health Program. Congratulations are in order. Cure our ills, Tirzah.
Molly Ungrady's reign of academic terror continues in Finland.
The great Molly Ungrady just had her paper accepted at the Learning and Plasticity conference in April (2018) in Äkäslompolo, Finland:
Early Detection of Lexical-Semantic Impairment in Minority Cognitive Aging.
Neuropsychologia paper out and about town
Congratulations to Drs. Richard Binney and Sameer Ashaie and all of the other nameless, faceless co-authors on our tDCS paper:
Binney RJ, Ashaie SA, Zuckerman BM, Hung J, & Reilly J (in press). Cathodal tDCS of the bilateral anterior temporal lobes facilitates semantically-driven verbal fluency. Neuropsychologia
Yes! cathodal stimulation of the ATL was facilitative in verbal fluency. Alert the press!
Congratulations to Joshua Troche et al. (et al. is me and Seb Crutch)
Our article was just accepted to Frontiers in Psychology (Language Sciences). Be on the lookout for: Troche J, Crutch SJ, & Reilly J (2017). Defining a conceptual topography of word concreteness: Clustering properties of emotion, sensation, and magnitude among 750 English words. Frontiers in Language Science.
adieu 2017 summer interns
What an incredible group of interns this summer -- and Bonnie Zuckerman snuck in there, too.
Elizabeth Stangl's poster accepted to ASHA 2017
Congratulations to Elizabeth Stangl on the acceptance of her poster to the 2017 American Speech Language Hearing Association Annual Conference in LA! The poster is titled:
Assessing Mindfulness Among Undergraduate & Graduate Speech Language Pathology Students & its Clinical Implications
Allie Kelly's coprolalia paper accepted to Neurobiology of Language
Congratulations to Allie Kelly et al. on the acceptance of their abstract to this year's SNL conference. Title: 'Watch your mouth: A Neuropsychological Case Study of Evoked Pupillary Responses to Profanity in Aphasia with Coprolalia
I am reasonably confident that this will be the only poster at the conference that prominently features the f-bomb, c-bomb, sh-bomb, or any other bomb.
Temple Lab Graduates 2017
Huzzah! Off into the world go our 2017 lab graduates -- Victoria Rodriguez, Jennifer Brandley, Veronica O'Reilly, Rameez Sultan
some really nice bilingual semantic clustering data (spanish-english)
Our recent work on profanity mentioned in Slate
Shoutout to Ben Zimmer on his article in Slate:
A New Breakthrough in the History of the “S---gibbon”: The Insult’s Originator Steps Forward
The article references our recent work (under review) on combinatorial profanity. We were/are specifically interested in why certain combinations of words (e.g., jizztrumpet or fucksauce) form plausible and effective new curse words. As with any article review, we have no idea where the paper will eventually land, but I am hoping for an eventual IgNobel.
