Albert Costa

researcher

Born 1970-01-01

Albert Costa is …
instance of (P31):
humanQ5

External links are
P9984CANTIC ID981058518965806706
P227GND ID1202487726
P269IdRef ID15780044X
P213ISNI0000000060743085
P244Library of Congress authority IDno2008137894
P950National Library of Spain IDXX1223202
P496ORCID iD0000-0002-8477-5609
P3829Publons author ID2854694
P1053ResearcherIDD-2850-2009
P1153Scopus author ID7401876506
P11686University of Barcelona authority ID981058518965806706
P1580University of Barcelona authority ID (former scheme)a1380399
P214VIAF ID86989304
P10832WorldCat Entities IDE39PBJvHdf84WwF9HmVtPcR7pP

P69educated atHarvard UniversityQ13371
Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyQ49108
P108employerPompeu Fabra UniversityQ24543
University of BarcelonaQ219615
Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced StudiesQ5051216
P734family nameCostaQ2671589
CostaQ2671589
CostaQ2671589
P735given nameAlbertQ577011
AlbertQ577011
P106occupationresearcherQ1650915
P21sex or gendermaleQ6581097

Reverse relations

author (P50)
Q46078625"Piensa" twice: on the foreign language effect in decision making
Q28296630A disadvantage in bilingual sentence production modulated by syntactic frequency and similarity across languages
Q93169493A flexible criterion of response selection: When is it needed? Comment on Nozari and Hepner (2018)
Q48025512Anterior cingulate cortex sulcation and its differential effects on conflict monitoring in bilinguals and monolinguals
Q36915036Architectures, representations and processes of language production.
Q58215179Bilingual word perception and production: two sides of the same coin?
Q34228831Bilingualism tunes the anterior cingulate cortex for conflict monitoring.
Q81483700Bilingualism: functional and neural perspectives
Q34994278Bilinguals use language-control brain areas more than monolinguals to perform non-linguistic switching tasks
Q30490114Brain potentials to native phoneme discrimination reveal the origin of individual differences in learning the sounds of a second language.
Q42859363Breaking Down the Bilingual Cost in Speech Production
Q48161271Bridging language and attention: brain basis of the impact of bilingualism on cognitive control.
Q49124269Can Faces Prime a Language?
Q48793199Can bilinguals see it coming? Word anticipation in L2 sentence reading.
Q38392883Category-specific semantic deficits in Alzheimer's disease: a semantic priming study.
Q85092519Characterizing the bilingual disadvantage in noun phrase production
Q42601687Conscious intention to speak proactively facilitates lexical access during overt object naming
Q47840222Corrigendum for: Do bilinguals automatically activate their native language when they are not using it?
Q36579923Different selection principles of freestanding and bound morphemes in language production
Q38387181Discourse comprehension in L2: Making sense of what is not explicitly said.
Q48467937Do Bilinguals Automatically Activate Their Native Language When They Are Not Using It?
Q48340964Do bilinguals show neural differences with monolinguals when processing their native language?
Q47165185Do you what I say? People reconstruct the syntax of anomalous utterances
Q28238486Does bilingualism hamper lexical access in speech production?
Q38409080Does the speaker matter? Online processing of semantic and pragmatic information in L2 speech comprehension.
Q51934207Does word frequency affect lexical selection in speech production?
Q38394322Foreign-accented speech modulates linguistic anticipatory processes.
Q37550363From literal meaning to veracity in two hundred milliseconds
Q38388869Grammatical and nongrammatical contributions to closed-class word selection.
Q38392030Grammatical category-specific deficits in bilingual aphasia
Q58215175How do highly proficient bilinguals control their lexicalization process? Inhibitory and language-specific selection mechanisms are both functional
Q34971550How does the bilingual experience sculpt the brain?
Q38402617Integration of moral values during L2 sentence processing
Q48248969Language Control in Bilinguals: Monitoring and Response Selection.
Q47661291Language control in bilinguals: Intention to speak vs. execution of speech
Q48358718Language proficiency modulates the engagement of cognitive control areas in multilinguals.
Q52647589Language switching makes pronunciation less nativelike.
Q48880742Lexical plasticity in early bilinguals does not alter phoneme categories: II. Experimental evidence
Q38397676Lexical selection is not by competition: a reinterpretation of semantic interference and facilitation effects in the picture-word interference paradigm.
Q61449257Losing control of your languages: A case study
Q48425086Lying in a native and foreign language.
Q63982555Manipulating inattentional blindness within and across sensory modalities
Q84060489Neural bases of language switching in high and early proficient bilinguals
Q58198773Neural basis of bilingual language control
Q57531744Neuroanatomical markers of individual differences in native and non-native vowel perception
Q39157329Numerical representations and intuitions of probabilities at 12 months.
Q38425276On predicting others' words: electrophysiological evidence of prediction in speech production
Q51926936On the bilingual advantage in conflict processing: now you see it, now you don't.
Q36128874On the facilitatory effects of cognate words in bilingual speech production.
Q50523326On the overlap between bilingual language control and domain-general executive control.
Q38477236On the parallel deterioration of lexico-semantic processes in the bilinguals' two languages: evidence from Alzheimer's disease.
Q38414464On the temporal dynamics of sign production: An ERP study in Catalan Sign Language (LSC).
Q48365870Our moral choices are foreign to us.
Q82664463Planning at the phonological level during sentence production
Q47713110Processing advantage for emotional words in bilingual speakers.
Q30414540Processing changes when listening to foreign-accented speech
Q40386098Qualitative Differences between Bilingual Language Control and Executive Control: Evidence from Task-Switching.
Q48832013Reconciling phonological neighborhood effects in speech production through single trial analysis.
Q38419573Regular and irregular morphology and its relationship with agrammatism: evidence from two Spanish-Catalan bilinguals.
Q38390767Semantic interference and its control: A functional neuroimaging and connectivity study.
Q59782676Situating language production within the matrix of human cognition: The state of the art in language production research
Q30355847Speak My Language and I Will Remember Your Face Better: An ERP Study
Q57531873The Gender Congruity Effect: Evidence from Spanish and Catalan
Q37106261The Impact of Early Bilingualism on Face Recognition Processes
Q77813974The absence of a gender congruency effect in romance languages: a matter of stimulus onset asynchrony?
Q48921329The after-effects of bilingual language production
Q47550747The cortical dynamics of speaking: Lexical and phonological knowledge simultaneously recruit the frontal and temporal cortex within 200 ms.
Q38381352The distractor picture paradox in speech production: evidence from the word translation task.
Q55501998The dynamics of human cognition: increasing global integration coupled with decreasing segregation found using iEEG
Q47649732The emotional impact of being myself: Emotions and foreign-language processing
Q38425335The gender congruency effect and the selection of freestanding and bound morphemes: evidence from croatian.
Q57531755The impact of bilingualism on the executive control and orienting networks of attention
Q42010384The impact of early bilingualism on controlling a language learned late: an ERP study
Q38464844The missing link between faces and names: evidence from Alzheimer's disease patients.
Q42198181The neurocognition of language production: introduction to the special topic.
Q57531780The organisation of nouns and verbs in bilingual speakers: A case of bilingual grammatical category-specific deficit
Q86986667The poor helping the rich: how can incomplete representations monitor complete ones?
Q48435857The role of executive control in bilingual language production: A study with Parkinson's disease individuals.
Q48546392The role of the left putamen in multilingual language production.
Q47433791The size of an attentional window affects working memory guidance.
Q49114042The temporal dynamics of first versus second language production.
Q30414413The way you say it, the way I feel it: emotional word processing in accented speech.
Q38625965Thinking More or Feeling Less? Explaining the Foreign-Language Effect on Moral Judgment.
Q38379626Tracking lexical access in speech production: electrophysiological correlates of word frequency and cognate effects.
Q38947659Using a Foreign Language Changes Our Choices.
Q75309950What determines the speed of lexical access: homophone or specific-word frequency? A reply to Jescheniak et al. (2003)
Q42369670What do your eyes reveal about your foreign language? Reading emotional sentences in a native and foreign language.
Q37410043When does word frequency influence written production?
Q38374356When one can write SALTO as noun but not as verb: a grammatical category-specific, modality-specific deficit.
Q38604952When the tail counts: the advantage of bilingualism through the ex-gaussian distribution analysis
Q48109798Whole network, temporal and parietal lobe contributions to the earliest phases of language production
Q21132057Your morals depend on language