Marcos Díaz Lago

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Papers
- Psychophysiology, 61(12), e14663. doi:10.1111/psyp.14663 Unpleasant words can affect the detection of morphosyntactic errors: An ERP study on individual differences.
- Journal of Neurolinguistics, 44, 203-222. doi:10.1016/j.jneuroling.2017.06.002 Processing gender agreement and word emotionality: New electrophysiological and behavioural evidence.
- Journal of Neurolinguistics, 36, 79-93. doi:10.1016/j.jneuroling.2015.07.001 Time course of gender agreement violations containing emotional words.
Conferences
- Poster presented at XIV Conference of the Spanish Society for Experimental Psychology (SEPEX). Almería, España. Individual differences in the causality bias under disfluent conditions: Raven’s progressive matrices negatively correlate with the illusion of causality when the information is hard-to-read.
- Poster presented at the Xth SEPEX Congress (SEPEX-SEPNECA). Murcia, Spain. Neural correlates of syntactic and emotional processing: an ERP study.
- Poster presented at the XIth International Symposium of Psycholinguistics. Tenerife, Spain. Testing the effect of lexical factors on RC attachment. Could they reverse the NP1 preference?.
- Paper presented at the Third International Postgraduate Conference on Language and Cognition (ELC3). Santiago de Compostela, Spain. The effect of emotional valence on disambiguation processes: a completion study involving relative clauses in Spanish.
- Paper presented at the Fourth Annual Neurobiology of Language Conference (NLC 2012). San Sebastián, Spain. Processing gender agreement violations containing emotional words in Spanish: an ERP study.
- Póster presented at the V European Congress of Methodology. Santiago de Compostela, Spain. The effects of the experimental list on the completion of ambiguous relative clauses.
- Paper presented at the Language and Neuroscience Conference. Florianópolis, Brasil. Crossing morphological violations of agreement and word emotionality using the ERP technique.
- Paper presented at the BapSepeX 1st Joint Meeting (IXth SEPEX Congress). Lieja, Belgium. Pleasant nouns attract ambiguous relative clauses: evidence from a sentence completion study.
- Paper presented at the X Simposio de Psicolingüística. San Sebastián, Spain. Ambiguous relative clauses… here we go again: Bringing to light the genuine effect of emotional valence.