Publications
(2005).
Whorf Hypothesis Is Supported in the Right Visual Field but Not The Left.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 103(2), 489-494.
(2006). Universal Foci and Varying Boundaries in Linguistic Color Categories.
Proceedings of the 27th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2005). 1827-1832.
(2005). Support for Lateralization of the Whorf Effect Beyond the Realm of Color Discrimination.
Brain and Language. 105(2), 91-98.
(2008).
(1993).
(2009). Semantic categories of artifacts and animals reflect efficient coding.
Proceedings of the 41st Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society.
(2019). Resolving the Question of Color Naming Universals.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 100(15), 9085-9089.
(2003). Reduplication and the Arbitrariness of the Sign.
Proceedings of the 20th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 1998). 887-892.
(1998).
(1994).
Poverty of the Stimulus? A Rational Approach.
Proceedings of the 28th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2006).
(2006). Linguistic and Non-Linguistic Spatial Categorization.
Cognition. 75(3), 209-235.
(2000).
(1991). Learning the Unlearnable: The Role of Missing Evidence.
Cognition. 93(2), 147-155.
(2004).
(1990).
(1991).
(2009). Lateralization of Categorical Perception of Color Changes with Color Term Acquisition.
105(47), 18221-18225.
(2008). Language, Thought, and Color: Whorf Was Half Right.
Trends in Cognitive Science. 13(10), 439-446.
(2009). Language, Thought, and Color: Recent Developments.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 10(2), 51-54.
(2006).
(2010). L0 - The First Five Years of an Automated Language Acquisition Project.
10(1-2), 103-129.
(1996). Indirect Evidence and the Poverty of the Stimulus: The Case of Anaphoric One.
Cognitive Science. 33(2), 287-300.
(2009).
(1996).
(1996).