Lewis P. Shapiro Curriculum Vitae 2016 School of Speech, , and Hearing Sciences San Diego State University San Diego, CA 92182-1518 (619) 594-6558 http://slhs.sdsu.edu/ E-mail: [email protected]

Summary (as of January 2016):

Current Position: Director of the School of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences; Professor, School of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences; and SDSU/UCSD Joint Doctoral Program in Language and Communicative Disorders (Executive Committee).

Education. Ph.D., Psychology (Linguistics and Cognitive Science), Brandeis University, 1987. M.A., Speech-Language Pathology, Memphis State University, 1977. B.A., Speech-Language Pathology, University of Florida, 1974.

Research Interests. The moment-by-moment unfolding of language and cognitive processing in neurologically healthy adults and those with brain damage, as well as in children with and without language disorders; the interaction of language-specific processing with other cognitive operations; brain-language relations through lesion analyses and brain imaging; the efficacy and neurological implications of treatment for adults with language disorders.

Research Support. Funded continuously by the NIH since 1988.

Publication Record. Approx. 70 peer-reviewed articles & chapters, over 150 peer-reviewed and invited presentations, two edited books.

Academic/Research Positions. San Diego State University, School of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, and SDSU/UCSD Joint Doctoral Program in Language and Communicative Disorders, 1995-present; Florida Atlantic University, Program in Complex Systems and Brain Sciences, Department of Psychology, 1989-1995; Boston University School of Medicine, Research Center, 1986-1989.

Awards. Outstanding Alumnus Award, University of Florida (2016); American Speech- Language-Hearing Association Editors Award (2008); Commencement Grand Marshall, SDSU College of Health and Human Services (2006); SDSU Alumni Association Award for Outstanding Faculty Contributions to the University (2005); American Speech-Language- Hearing Association Fellow (2003); Distinguished Alumni (University of Memphis (2002); SDSU Outstanding Faculty (1999, 2002, 2003, 2009, 2010, 2011).

Lewis P. Shapiro (2016)

EDUCATION: B.A. University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, 1974 Speech-Language Pathology/Psychology M.A. Memphis State University, Memphis, TN, 1977 Speech-Language Pathology Thesis: Mental operations involved in the comprehension of active and passive sentences in normal and aphasic adults, May, 1977 Ph.D. Brandeis University, Waltham, MA, 1987 Psychology: Linguistics and Cognitive Science Dissertation: The mental representation of verbs, Dec., 1987

PROFESSIONAL (ACADEMIC) EXPERIENCE: July 2014-2016 Director, School of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, SDSU 2005-2008 Speech & Language Division Head, SDSU 2000-present Professor, School of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, SDSU 1998-1999 Interim Chair, Department of Communicative Disorders, SDSU 1997-present Adjunct Professor, Department of Psychology, SDSU 1995-1999 SDSU Associate Professor, Department of Communicative Disorders, and 1995-present SDSU/UCSD Joint Doctoral Program in Language and Comm. Disorders, Executive Committee 1993-1995 Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, and Ph.D. Program in Complex Systems and Brain Sciences, Florida Atlantic University (FAU), Boca Raton, FL 1989-1995 Research Scientist, Center for Complex Systems, FAU 1989-1993 Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, FAU 1986-present Research Scientist; Research Professor of Neurology (Neuropsychology) Boston University School of Medicine, Harold Goodglass Aphasia Research Center 1982-1983 Research Assistant, Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences CUNY Graduate Center, New York, NY

RESEARCH SUPPORT (Federal) CURRENT: 2011-2016 “Neurocognitive Approaches to Communication Disorders” NIH-NIDCD; T32DC007361 (Training grant; continuation), $965,000 Principal Investigator; 2016-2021 continuation under review.

2015-2017 “Perfusion-informed lesion mapping in aphasia”; NIH-NIDCD; R21, Co- investigator (Dr. Tracy Love, PI).

COMPLETED:

2009-2015 “The temporal characteristics of brain-language relationships: Evidence from impaired populations”; NIH-NIDCD; DC009272 – $1,200,000 Multiple Principal Investigator (with Dr. Tracy Love)

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1987-1988 "Accessing the Mental Dictionary" NIH (BRSG) - $10,000 Principal Investigator (with Dr. Robert Katz)

1988-1994 "Sentence Processing in Normal and Aphasic Populations" NIH-NIDCD; DC00494, $500,000; Principal Investigator 1995-2000 Renewed DC000494-06 - $1,000,000; Principal Investigator 2002-2007 Renewed DC000494-10 - $1,200,000; Principal Investigator 2007-2013 Renewed DC000494-15 - $1,500,000; Principal Investigator

1992-1996 "Linguistic Specific Treatment of Sentence Production Deficits in Aphasia" NIH-NIDCD; DC01948 - $840,000 Co-Principal Investigator (with Dr. Cynthia Thompson, Northwestern U.) 1997-2002 Renewed DC01948-06 - $1,200,000

1999-2004 “On Line Computation of Long Distance Dependencies in Sentence Processing” United States-Israel BiNational Science Foundation (with Drs. Yosef Grodzinsky & David Swinney)

Past Consultantships: Aphasia research center grant (Dr. Harold Goodglass, Boston University Medical Center, 1986-1990); “Pacific coast cognitive rehabilitation research” (Dr. Nina Dronkers, UC Davis, James S. McDonnell Foundation, 1997); “Real-time examination of childhood language disorders” (Dr. Tracy Love, co-PI; NIH, 2002-2008); “Linguistic-specific treatment of sentence production deficits in aphasia” (Dr. Cynthia Thompson, Northwestern University, NIH, 2002-2007). “fMRI studies of recovery in Aphasia” (Dr. Tracy Love, co-PI; NIH, 2005-2009).

AWARDS 1999, 2002, 2003, 2009, 2010, 2011 SDSU Outstanding Faculty Award 2003 Distinguished Alumni; University of Memphis 2004 Fellow of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 2005 SDSU Alumni Association award for Outstanding Faculty Contributions to the University 2008 Editors Award; American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 2015 Outstanding Alumnus Award, University of Florida

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PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATIONS (*signifies current or former student): 1. Shapiro, L.P., & Jensen, L. 1986. Processing open and closed class-headed nonwords: Left hemisphere support for separate vocabularies. Brain and Language, 28, 318-327. 2. Shapiro, L.P., Zurif, E., & Grimshaw, J. 1987. Sentence processing and the mental representation of verbs. Cognition, 27, 219-246. 3. Grodzinsky, Y., & Shapiro, L.P. 1988. Two perspectives on the modularity of language. Aphasiology, 2, 295-298. 4. Shapiro, L.P., Zurif, E., Carey, S., & Grossman, M. 1989. Comprehension of lexical subcategory distinctions by aphasic patients: proper and common, and mass and count nouns. Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 32, 481-488. 5. Shapiro, L.P., Zurif, E., & Grimshaw, J. 1989. Verb representation and sentence processing: contextual impenetrability. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 18, 223-243. 6. Shapiro, L.P., & Levine, B.A. 1989. Real-time sentence processing in aphasia. Clinical Aphasiology, 18, 281-296. 7. Shapiro, L.P., & Levine, B.A. 1990. Verb processing during sentence comprehension in aphasia. Brain and Language, 38, 21-47. 8. Canseco-Gonzalez, E., Shapiro, L.P., Zurif, E.B., & Baker, E. 1990. Predicate-argument structure as a link between linguistic and nonlinguistic representations. Brain and Language, 39, 391-404. 9. Canseco-Gonzalez, E., Shapiro, L.P., Zurif, E.B., & Baker, E. 1991. Lexical argument structure representations and their role in translation across cognitive domains. Brain and Language, 40, 384-392. 10. Prather, P., Shapiro, L.P., Zurif, E.B., & Swinney, D. 1991. Real-time examinations of lexical processing in aphasia. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 20, 271-281. 11. Shapiro, L.P., *Brookins, B., *Gordon, B., & *Nagel, N. 1991. Verb effects during sentence processing. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 17, 983-996. 12. Shapiro, L.P., *McNamara, P., Zurif, E., Lanzoni, S., & Cermak, L. 1992. Processing complexity and sentence memory: Evidence from amnesia. Brain and Language, 42, 431-453. 13. Thompson, C.K., Shapiro, L.P., & Roberts, M. 1993. Treatment of sentence production deficits in aphasia: a linguistic-specific approach to wh-interrogative training and generalization. Aphasiology, 7, 111-133. 14. Shapiro, L.P., *Nagel, N., & Levine, B.A. 1993. Preferences for a verb's complements and their use in sentence processing. Journal of Memory and Language, 32, 96-114. 15. Shapiro, L.P., *Gordon, B., *Hack, N., & *Killackey, J. 1993. Verb-argument structure processing in complex sentences in Broca's and Wernicke's aphasia. Brain and Language, 45, 423-447. 16. Shapiro, L.P., & Thompson, C.K. 1994. The use of linguistic theory as a framework for treatment studies in aphasia. Clinical Aphasiology, 22, 291-305. 17. Thompson, C.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1994. A linguistic-specific approach to treatment of sentence production deficits in aphasia. Clinical Aphasiology, 22, 307-323. 18. Shapiro, L.P., & Thompson, C.K. 1994. On lexical properties and syntax. Linguistiche Berichte, Special Issue: Linguistics and Cognitive Neuroscience, 168-201. 19. *Nagel, H.N., Shapiro, L.P., & *Nawy, R. 1994. Prosody and the processing of filler-gap sentences. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 23, 473-485. 20. Thompson, C. K., Shapiro, L. P., Li, L., & Schendel, L. 1995. Analysis of verbs and verb-argument structure: A method for quantification of aphasic language production. Clinical Aphasiology, 121- 140. 4 Lewis P. Shapiro (2016)

21. Shapiro, L.P. & *Nagel, H.N. 1995. Lexical properties, prosody, and syntax: Implications for normal and disordered language. Brain and Language, 50, 240-257. 22. Thompson, C.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1995. Training sentence production in agrammatism: Implications for normal and disordered language. Brain and Language, 50, 201-224. 23. Shapiro, L.P. & Hestvik, A. 1995. On-line comprehension of VP-ellipsis: syntactic reconstruction and semantic influence. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 24, 517-532. 24. *Nagel, H.N., Shapiro, L.P., & Tuller, B., & *Nawy, R. 1996. Prosodic influences on the resolution of temporary ambiguity during on-line sentence processing. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 25, 319-344. 25. Rubin, S.S., Newhoff, M., Peach, R.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1996. Electrophysiological indices of lexical processing: The effects of verb complexity and age. Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 39, 1071-1080. 26. Shapiro, L.P. 1996. Sentence Processing. ASHA Special Interest Division (Adult Language Disorders) Newsletter, 6, 7-13. 27. Thompson, C.K., Shapiro, L.P., Jacobs, B.J., & Schneider, S.L. 1996. Training Wh-question productions in agrammatic aphasia: analysis of argument and adjunct movement. Brain and Language, 52, 175-228. 28. Shapiro, L.P. 1997. Tutorial: An Introduction to Syntax. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 40, 254-272. 29. Thompson, C.K., Shapiro, L.P., Ballard, K.J., & Jacobs, B.J. 1997. Training and generalized production of wh- and NP-movement structures in agrammatic aphasia. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 40, 228-244. 30. Thompson, C.K., Lange, K.L., Schneider, S.L., & Shapiro, L.P. 1997. Agrammatic and non-brain- damaged subjects’ verb and verb-argument structure production. Aphasiology, 11, 473-490. 31. *Borsky, S., Tuller, B., & Shapiro, L.P. 1998. “How to milk a coat:” The effects of semantic and acoustic information on categorization. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 103, 2670-2676. 32. Russo, K.D., Peach, R.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1998. Verb preference effects in the sentence comprehension of fluent aphasic individuals. Aphasiology, 12, 537-545. 33. Shapiro, L.P., Swinney, D.A., & *Borsky, S. 1998. On-line examination of language performance in normal and neurologically-impaired adults. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 7, 49-60. 34. Thompson, C.K., Ballard, K.J., & Shapiro, L.P. 1998. The role of complexity in training Wh- movement structures in agrammatic aphasia: Optimal order for promoting generalization. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 4, 661-674. 35. *Raczaszek, J., Tuller, B., Shapiro, L.P., Case, P., & Kelso, S. 1999. Categorization of ambiguous sentences as a function of a changing prosodic parameter: A dynamical approach. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 28, 367-394. 36. *Borsky, S., Shapiro, L.P., & Tuller, B. 2000. The temporal unfolding of local acoustic information and sentence context. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 29, 155-168. 37. Shapiro, L.P. 2000. Charting the time-course of language processing. Brain and Language, 71, 224- 226. 38. Granier, J., Robin, D., Shapiro, L.P., Peach, R.K., & Zimba, L.D. 2000. Measuring processing load during sentence comprehension: Visuomotor tracking. Aphasiology, 14, 501-513.

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39. Shapiro, L.P., & Friedmann, N. 2001. Your syntactic component really is necessary. Aphasiology, 15, 361-367. 40. Friedmann, N., Shapiro, L.P., & Swinney, D.A. 2001. Agrammatic comprehension of active sentences with moved objects: The case of OVS and OSV structures. Brain and Cognition, 46, 7-8. 41. *Maas, E., Barlow, J., Robin, D., & Shapiro, L.P. 2002. Treatment of phonological errors in aphasia and apraxia of speech: Effects of phonological complexity. Aphasiology, 16, 609-622. 42. Friedmann, N., & Shapiro, L.P. 2003. Agrammatic comprehension of OSV and OVS sentences in Hebrew. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 46, 288-297. 43. Thompson, C.K., Shapiro, L.P., Kiran, S., & Sobecks, J. 2003. The role of syntactic complexity in treatment of sentence deficits in agrammatic aphasia: The complexity account of treatment efficacy (CATE). Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 46, 591-607. 44. Shapiro, L.P., Hestvik, A., *Lesan, L., & *Garcia, A.R. 2003. Charting the time-course of sentence processing: Evidence for an initial and independent structural analysis. Journal of Memory and Language, 49, 1-19. 45. Thompson, C.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 2005. Treating agrammatic aphasia within a linguistic framework: treatment of underlying forms. Aphasiology, 19, 1021-1036. 46. McGivern, R.F., Rodriguez, A., Hilliard, V.R., Fielding, B., Anderson, J., Shapiro, L.P., & Reilly, S. 2007. Improving preliteracy and pre-math skills of Head Start children with classroom computer games. Journal of Early Childhood Services: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Effectiveness, 1, 71-81. 47. Thompson, C.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 2007. Syntactic complexity in treatment of sentence deficits. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 16, 30-42. 48. Wright, H.H., *Downey, R.A., *Gravier, M., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2007. Processing distinct information types in working memory in Aphasia. Aphasiology, 21, 802-813. 49. *Raczaszek-Leonardi, J., Shapiro, L.P., Tuller, B., Kelso, S.A. 2008. Activating basic category exemplars in sentence contexts: A dynamical approach. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 37, 87-113. 50. Friedmann, N., Shapiro, L.P., Taranto, G., & Swinney, D. 2008. The leaf fell (the leaf): the on-line processing of unaccusatives. Linguistic Inquiry, 39, 355-377. 51. *Poirier, J., Shapiro, L.P., Love, T., Grodzinsky, Y. 2009. The on-line processing of verb phrase ellipsis in aphasia. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 38, 237-254. 52. *de Goede, D., Shapiro, L.P., Wester, F., Swinney, D.A., & Bastiannse, R., 2009. The time course of verb processing in Dutch sentences. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 38, 181-200. 53. Callahan, S.M., Shapiro, L.P., & Love, T. 2010. Parallelism effects and verb activation: The sustained reactivation hypothesis. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 39, 101-118. 54. *Poirier, J., *Wolfinger, K., *Spellman, L., & Shapiro, L.P. 2010. The real-time processing of sluiced sentences. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 39, 411-427. 55. *Poirier, J., Walenski, M., & Shapiro, L.P. 2012. The role of parallelism in real-time processing of anaphora. Language and Cognitive Processes, 27, 868-886. 56. *Ferrill, M., Love, T., Walenski, M., & Shapiro, L.P. 2012. The time-course of lexical activation during sentence comprehension in aphasia. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 21, S179-S189. 57. *Sheppard, S.M., Walenski, M., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2015. The auditory comprehension of Wh-questions in aphasia: Support for the intervener hypothesis. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, 58, 781-797. doi:10.1044/2015_JSLHR-L-14-0099.

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58. *Sullivan, N., Walenski, M., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. In press. The comprehension of sentences with unaccusative verbs in aphasia: A test of the intervener hypothesis. Aphasiology.

CHAPTERS 1. Shapiro, L.P. 1992. Properties of lexical entries and their real-time implementation. In R. Levine (Ed.), Formal Grammar: Theory and Implementation. New York: Oxford University Press. 2. *Borsky, S., & Shapiro, L.P. 1998. Context effects re-visited. In D. Hillert (Ed.), Sentence Processing: A Cross-Linguistic Perspective. Academic Press. 3. Shapiro, L.P. 2000. The processing of long-distance dependencies in normal listeners: Evidence for form-driven activation. In R. Bastiaanse & Y. Grodzinsky (Eds.), Grammatical Disorders in Aphasia: A Neurolinguistic Perspective. London: Whurr Publishers. 4. Shapiro, L.P. 2000. An introduction to syntax. In R. Bastiaanse & Y. Grodzinsky (Eds.), Grammatical Disorders in Aphasia: A Neurolinguistic Perspective. London: Whurr Publishers (reprinted with permission, and revised, from Shapiro, 1997, JSLHR). 5. Shapiro, L.P. 2000. Some recent investigations of gap filling in normal listeners: Implications for normal and disordered language processing. In Y. Grodzinsky, L.P. Shapiro, & D.A. Swinney (Eds.), Language and the Brain: Representation and Processing. San Diego: Academic. 6. Shapiro, L.P. 2003. The neurology of syntax and semantics. The Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science, London: Nature Publishing Group. 7. Shapiro, L.P. 2003. Argument structure: Representation and processing. The Encyclopedia of Communication Sciences and Disorders, MIT Press. 8. Friedmann, N., Taranto, G., Shapiro L.P., & Swinney, D. 2003. The vase fell (the vase): the online processing of unaccusatives. In Y. Falk (Ed.), Proceedings of the 19th IATL Conference. 9. Shapiro, L.P. & Thompson, C.K. 2006. Training language deficits in Broca’s aphasia. In Y. Grodzinsky and K. Amunts (Eds.), Broca’s Region. Oxford University Press. 10. Love, T. & Shapiro, L.P. 2011. Language processing in the left hemisphere. In Patrick Colm Hogan (Ed.), Cambridge Encyclopedia of the Language Sciences. Cambridge University Press, pp. 428-431. 11. Poirier, J. & Shapiro, L.P. 2012. Psycholinguistic foundations, in R.K. Peach & L.P. Shapiro (Eds.), Cognition and Acquired Language Disorders: An Information Processing Approach. Elsevier Publishing.

BOOKS Grodzinsky, Y., Shapiro, L.P., & Swinney. D.A. (Eds.). 2000. Language and the Brain: Representation and Processing. San Diego: Academic Press. Peach, R.K., & Shapiro, L.P. (Eds.). 2012. Cognition and Acquired Language Disorders: An Information Processing Approach. Elsevier Publishing.

PEER-REVIEWED PRESENTATIONS (* signifies student) 1. Shapiro, L.P. 1977. Active and passive sentence comprehension in normal and aphasic adults. Paper presented to the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, Chicago. 2. Shapiro, L.P., & Jensen, L. 1983. A computational distinction of vocabulary type in normal adults. Paper presented to the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, Chicago. 3. Shapiro, L.P., Zurif, E., & Carey, S. 1984. Using syntactic cues to retrieve lexical subcategories. Paper presented to the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, Toronto.

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4. Shapiro, L.P. 1985. Verb subcategorization and sentence processing. Paper presented to the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, Washington, D.C. 5. Shapiro, L.P., Zurif, E., Carey, S., & Grossman, M. 1986. Form class distinctions in agrammatism. Paper presented to the Academy of Aphasia, Nashville. 6. Shapiro, L.P., & Hestvik, A. 1986. Current linguistic theory, sentence processing and aphasia. Seminar presented to the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, Detroit. 7. Shapiro, L.P., & Feldman, L.A. 1987. Verb representation and sentence processing in normal and aphasic adults. Paper presented to the Academy of Aphasia, Phoenix. 8. Kleczewska, M.K., Shapiro, L.P., Steele, R.D., & Weinrich, M. 1987. Design considerations for a computer-based visual communication system for aphasic patients. Seminar presented to the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, New Orleans. 9. Shapiro, L.P., & Levine, B.A. 1988. Real-time sentence processing in aphasia. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Cape Cod. 10. Canseco-Gonzalez, E., Shapiro, L.P., Baker, E., & Zurif, E. 1988. The role of predicate-argument structure in a computerized artificial language for severe Aphasia. Paper presented to the Academy of Aphasia, Montreal. 11. Shapiro, L.P. 1989. Verbs and their argument structures. Symposium: Verb/noun dissociations in aphasia: implications for sentence processing. Academy of Aphasia, Sante Fe. 12. Peach, R.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1989. Theories of cognition and cognitive rehabilitation: implications for treatment. Seminar presented to the American Speech-Language- Hearing Association, St. Louis. 13. Shapiro, L.P. 1990. The role of argument structure in sentence processing in aphasia. CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, New York. 14. Peach, R.K., Shapiro, L.P., Rubin, S.S., & Schaude, B.A. 1990. Syntactic impairment following TBI as a function of sentence complexity. Paper presented to the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, Seattle. 15. Shapiro, L.P. 1990. Sentence processing in aphasia. Seminar presented to the American Speech- Language-Hearing Association, Seattle. 16. Shapiro, L.P., & *Nagel, H.N. 1991. Verb frame preferences and sentence processing: implications for a model of parsing. CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, Rochester, NY. 17. Shapiro, L.P., *McNamara, P., Zurif, E., Lanzoni, S., & Cermak, L. 1991. Working memory in sentence processing. Paper presented to the Academy of Aphasia, Rome, Italy. 18. Rubin, S.S., Peach, R.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1992. Probe evoked potentials as a measure of lexical processing. Paper presented to the International Neuropsychological Society, San Diego. 19. *Nagel, H. N., & Shapiro, L.P. 1992. The use of lexical preferences during sentence processing. Paper presented to the Florida Conference on Sensation, Perception, & Cognition, Gainesville. 20. Shapiro, L.P., & Thompson, C.K. 1992. The use of linguistic theory as a framework for treatment studies in aphasia. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Durango, Colorado. 21. Thompson, C.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1992. A linguistic-specific approach to treatment of sentence production deficits in aphasia. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Durango, Colorado. 22. Thompson, C.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1992. Linguistic-specific treatment of aphasic sentence processing disorders. Paper presented to the Academy of Aphasia, Toronto.

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23. Thompson, C.K., Shapiro, L.P., & Schendel, L. 1993. Analysis of verbs and verb-argument structure: a method for quantification of aphasic language production. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Sedona, Arizona. 24. Shapiro, L.P., *Gordon, B., & *Hack, N. 1993. Accessing a verb's thematic properties in complex sentences in Broca's and Wernicke's aphasia. Paper presented to the Academy of Aphasia, Tucson. 25. Thompson, C.K., Shapiro, L.P., Schendel, L., & Li, L. 1993. Analysis of verbs and verb-argument structure. Paper presented to the Academy of Aphasia, Tucson. 26. Shapiro, L.P. 1994. Information access and integration during sentence processing. Colloquia: Program in Linguistics, CUNY, New York; Department of Communication Disorders, Arizona State University, Tempe. 27. *Nagel, H.N., & Shapiro, L.P. 1994. The role of prosody in resolving attachment ambiguities. Paper presented to the Linguistic Society of America, Boston. 28. *Nagel, H.N., & Shapiro, L.P. 1994. Prosodic influences on real-time sentence comprehension. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, New York. 29. *Raczaszek, J., & Shapiro, L.P. 1994. Categorical perception of sentence meaning: a dynamical approach. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, NY. 30. Thompson, C.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1994. Training Wh-question production in aphasia: implications for normal and disordered language. Invited symposium: Cognitive approaches to rehabilitation and treatment, TENNET V, Montreal. 31. Shapiro, L.P. 1994. Lexical properties and syntax: implications for normal and disordered language. Presented to the Eighth Annual Florida Conference on Cognition. Boca Raton. 32. *Nagel, H.N., & Shapiro, L.P. 1994. Parsing syntactic ambiguity: prosodic influences. Presented to the Eighth Annual Florida Conference on Cognition. Boca Raton. 33. *Hack, N., Shapiro, L.P., & *Ortega, K. 1994. Lexical access in sentences: the processing of phrasal verbs. Presented to the Eighth Annual Florida Conference on Cognition. Boca Raton. 34. Thompson, C.K., Shapiro, L.P., Tait, M., & Schneider, S. 1994. Morpho-syntactic and lexical analyses of normal and agrammatic aphasic language production. Paper presented to TENNET V, Montreal. 35. Thompson, C.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1994. Linguistic-specific treatment of sentence production deficits in agrammatic aphasia: Theory and method. Seminar presented to the American Speech- Language-Hearing Association. New Orleans. 36. Ahrens, K., Swinney, D., & Shapiro, L.P. 1995. What is complex about a verb? Paper presented to the Linguistic Society of America, New Orleans. 37. Shapiro, L.P., Hestvik, A.H., & *Luscher, K. 1995. The on-line analysis of VP ellipsis. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, Tucson. 38. *Borsky, S., *Lewis, J., & Shapiro, L.P. 1995. Integrating the verb when the arguments are known. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, Tucson. 39. *Nagel, H.N., & Shapiro, L.P. 1995. Prosodic influences on the parsing of temporary ambiguities. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, Tucson. 40. *Raczaszek, J., & Shapiro, L.P. 1995. Prototypicality effects during on-line sentence comprehension: The role of context. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, Tucson. 41. Shapiro, L.P., & Hestvik, A. 1996. On-line processing of VP-ellipsis with reflexives. Paper presented to DAARC96, Lancaster University. 9 Lewis P. Shapiro (2016)

42. *Lewis, J., Shapiro, L.P., Tuller, B., & *Afton, R. 1996. The magnitude of cross-modal lexical priming as a function of the verb-object relation in a sentence. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, New York. 43. Shapiro, L.P., *Raczaszek, J., Tuller, B., & Kelso, S. 1996. The on-line analysis of sentences: Modularity re-visited. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Newport, RI. 44. Thompson, C.K., Shapiro, L.P., Lange, K.L., & Schneider, S.L. 1996. Agrammatic and non-brain damaged subjects’ verb and verb-argument production in constrained elicitation conditions. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Newport, RI. 45. *Borsky, S., Tuller, B., & Shapiro, L.P. 1997. How to milk a “coat”: The Effect of Semantic Sentence Context on Phonemic Categorization. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, Los Angeles. 46. *Lewis, J.R., Shapiro, L.P., Tuller, B., & *Afton, R. 1997. Local Contextual Impenetrability of Lexical Access and Gap-Filling. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, Los Angeles. 47. Russo, K.D., Peach, R.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1997. Verb preference effects in the sentence comprehension of aphasic individuals. Paper presented to the 27th Annual Clinical Aphasiology Conference. Bigfork, Montana. 48. Thompson, C.K., Ballard, K.J., Shapiro, L.P., Tait, M.E. 1997. Training complex Wh-movement structures in agrammatic aphasia: Optimal order for promoting generalization. Paper presented to the Academy of Aphasia, Philadelphia. 49. Tjaden, K., Shapiro, L.P., Nicol, J., & Swinney, D.A. 1997. Acoustic correlates of syntactic structure. Paper presented to the Acoustical Society of America, San Diego. 50. Shapiro, L.P., Hestvik, A., Suzuki, E., & Garcia, R. 1998. Verb properties and gap filling in complex VP ellipsis constructions. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, New Jersey. 51. *Borsky, S., Shapiro, L.P., Tuller, B., *Wolfe, K., & *Langford, C. 1998. When do you ‘milk a coat’? The time course of acoustic and semantic processing in sentences. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, New Jersey. 52. Shapiro, L.P., Robin, D., & Peach, R.K. 1998. A critical evaluation of the resource deficit hypothesis. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, North Carolina. 53. Thompson, C.K., Ballard, K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1998. The role of syntactic complexity in training wh- movement structures in agrammatic aphasia: Optimal order for promoting generalization. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, North Carolina. 54. *Borsky, S., Shapiro, L.P., & Tuller, B. 1999. “How do you milk a coat?’ The interaction of sentence context and local acoustic information during auditory sentence comprehension. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, NY. 55. Shapiro, L.P., *Oster, E., *Garcia, A.R., *Massey, A., & Thompson, C.K. 1999. On-line comprehension of wh-questions in discourse. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, NY. 56. *Oster, E., Shapiro, L.P., Love, T., *Lesan, L., & Swinney, D. 2000. The on-line processing of basic category terms on anterior and posterior aphasics. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Hawaii. 57. *Oster, E., Shapiro, L.P., Love, T., *Lesan, L., & Swinney, D. 2000. The on-line processing of basic category terms by brain-damaged populations.. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference. San Diego. 10 Lewis P. Shapiro (2016)

58. *Maas, E., Barlow, J., Morris, D., Robin, D., & Shapiro, L.P. 2000. Treatment of phonological errors in aphasia: Effects of complexity. Paper presented to the 9th International Aphasia Rehabilitation Conference. Rotterdam, The Netherlands. 59. Friedmann, N., Shapiro, L.P., & Swinney, D. 2000. Agrammatic comprehension of active sentences with moved objects. Paper presented to TENNET. Montreal. 60. *Maas, E., Barlow, J., Robin, D., & Shapiro, L.P. 2001. Treatment of phonological errors in aphasia and apraxia of speech: Effects of phonological complexity. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, New Mexico. 61. Shapiro, L.P., & Hestvik, A. 2002. First-pass parsing of VP-ellipsis. Paper presented to theCUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference. NY, NY. 62. Friedmann, N., & Shapiro, L.P. 2002. Agrammatic comprehension of Hebrew OSV and OVS sentences. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Missouri. 63. Shapiro, L.P., & Hestvik, A. 2003. Reconstructing missing arguments in VP-ellipsis constructions: A psycholinguistic investigation. Paper presented to the West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics (WCCFL) 22, San Diego. 64. Wester F., de Goede, D., Bastiaanse, R., Shapiro, L.P, & Swinney, D. 2003. Moved verbs in Dutch on-line sentence processing. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, Boston. 65. Maas, E., Shapiro, L.P. & Swinney, D. 2003. The nature of gap-filling: syntactic or semantic order? Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference. Boston. 66. Wester, F., de Goede, D., Bastiaanse, R., Maas, E., Den Ouden, D.B., Shapiro, L., & Swinney, D. 2003. Verb activation in Dutch during on-line sentence processing. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, Cambridge, MA. 67. Friedmann, N., Taranto, G., Shapiro, L.P., & Swinney, D. 2003. The vase fell (the vase): The online processing of unaccusatives. Paper presented to the IATL, Be'er Sheva, Israel. 68. de Goede, D., Wester, F., Bastiaanse, R., Swinney, D., & Shapiro, L.P. 2003. Verb activation patterns in Dutch matrix clauses during on-line spoken sentence comprehension. Paper presented to Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing (AMLaP), Glasgow, Scotland. 69. de Goede, D., Wester, F., Bastiaanse, R., Maas, E., Den Ouden, D.B., Shapiro, L.P., & Swinney, D., 2003. Verb movement and gap filling in Dutch sentence processing. Paper presented to the Verbs: Properties, Processes, and Problems Conference, London, UK. 70. Wester, F., de Goede, D., Bastiaanse, R., Maas, E., Swinney, D., & Shapiro, L.P. 2003. Verb activation in on-line sentence processing. Paper presented to the 4th Science of Aphasia Conference, Trieste, Italy. 71. *Downey, R.A., Wright, H.H., Schwartz, R.G., Newhoff, M., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2004. Toward a measure of working memory in Aphasia. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Park City, Utah. 72. de Goede, D., Wester, F., den Ouden, D-B., Bastiaanse, R., Shapiro, L.P., and Swinney, D. 2004. The time course of verb processing in Dutch sentences. Paper presented to the Cognitive Science Society, Chicago, IL. 73. de Goede, D., Wester, F., Bastiaanse, R., Swinney, D., & Shapiro, L.P. 2005. The role of the verb during on-line spoken sentence comprehension. Paper presented to the Interdisciplinary Workshop on the Identification and Representation of Verb Features and Verb Classes. Saarland University, Saarbrücken, Germany.

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74. *Poirier, J., Shapiro, L.P., Swinney, D., *Rothman, R. 2006. Unaccusatives in ellipsis: processing of covert material. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, New York, NY. 75. *Gravier, M., *Downey, R., Love, T., Wright, H., & Shapiro, L.P. 2006. Processing distinct information types in working memory in aphasia. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Ghent, Belgium. 76. *Poirier, J., Shapiro, L.P., Love, T., & Swinney, D. 2006. Verb phrase ellipsis: a research tool. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Ghent, Belgium. 77. *Poirier, J., Shapiro, L.P., Love, T., & Swinney, D. 2007. Processing verb phrase ellipsis: evidence for preserved processing reflexes in aphasia. Paper presented to the Cognitive Neuroscience Society, NY. 78. *Poirier, J., Shapiro, L.P., Love, T., & Swinney, D. 2007. The nature of verb phrase-ellipsis: evidence from aphasia. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, San Diego, CA. 79. Kenan, N., Friedmann, N., Schwartz, R., & Shapiro, L.P. 2008. Lexical-syntactic information in children with SLI. Presented at the 44th annual conference of the Israeli Speech Hearing and Language Association, Nazareth, Israel. 80. Callahan, S.M., Shapiro, L., & Love, T. 2008. The activation of verbs in sentences involving verb phrase anaphors. CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, NY, NY. 81. *Gutiérrez, R., Shapiro, L.P., Barlow, J., Fabiano-Smith, L., Kilpatrick, C., *Orton, M., & *Merrill, J. 2008. Online effects of phonotactic constraints across two . Workshop on Consonant Clusters and Structural Complexity, Munich, Germany. 82. Kenan, N., Friedmann, N., Schwartz, R., & Shapiro, L.P. 2009. Lexical characteristics of verbs in school-age children with specific language impairment. Paper presented to Language, Brain, & Communication. Bar-llan University, Ramat Gan, Israel. 83. *Gutierrez, R.S., Shapiro, L.P., Barlow, J.A., Fabiano-Smith, L., Kilpatrick, C., *Orton, M., & *Merrill, J. 2009. Simultaneous bilinguals do it faster and better: Evidence from online effects of agreement violations. CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, Davis, CA. 84. *Poirier, J., Shapiro, L.P., *Wolfinger, K., & *Spellman, L. 2009. The online processing of sluiced sentences. CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, Davis, CA. 85. *Poirier, J., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2009. Priming methods in Aphasia: revisiting slow lexical access. Cognitive Neuroscience Society, San Francisco, CA. 86. Fergadiotis, G., Wright, H.H., Katz, R., Ross, K., & Shapiro, L.P. 2009. Phonological working memory in aphasia. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Keystone, CO. 87. *Gutierrez, R., & Shapiro, L.P. 2010. Measuring the time course of sentence processing with pupillometry. CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference. New York, NY. 88. Brumm, K., *Gravier, M., Shapiro, L.P., & Love, T. 2010. Variability in aphasia: A neurophysiological perspective. Academy of Aphasia, Athens, Greece. 89. Shapiro, L.P., Amunts, K., Deschamps, I., Love, T., Pieperhoff, P., & Grodzinsky, Y. 2010. Associating shape and size of lesion with complex syntactic abilities in aphasia. Neurobiology of Language Conference, San Diego, CA. 90. Yang, D., Nip, I.S.B., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2010. Influence of speaker intent on speech movement variability. American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, Philadelphia, PA.

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91. *Gutierrez, R.S., *Karinen, C.K., *Butcher, L.B., & Shapiro, L.P. 2011. The effect of grammaticality and plausibility on pupil dilations. Paper presented to the CUNY Human Sentence Processing Conference, Stanford University, Palo Alton, CA. 92. *Gutierrez, R.S., & Shapiro, L.P. 2011. A first examination of aphasia using pupillometry. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Ft. Lauderdale, FL. 93. *Ferrill, M., *Karinen, C., Walenski, M., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2011. The time-course of lexical activation during sentence comprehension in aphasia. Paper presented to the Academy of Aphasia, Montreal, Canada. 94. *Ferrill, M., Love-Geffen, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2011. The time course of lexical activation during sentence processing in aphasia. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Ft. Lauderdale, FL. 95. *Gutierrez, R.S., & Shapiro, L.P. 2011. Measuring real time sentence processing with pupillometry. Paper presented to the New Trends in Experimental Psycholinguistics Conference, Madrid, Spain. 96. Walenski, M., Love, T., *Ferrill, M., Deschamps, I., Pieperhoffer, P., Amunts, K., Grodzinsky, Y., & Shapiro, L.P. 2012. Structure-function correspondences in Broca’s aphasia: Evidence from MRI and comprehension of verb phrase ellipsis constructions. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Lake Tahoe, CA. 97. Blumenfeld, H., Krizman, J., Viorica, M., Kraus, N., Adams, A., Gross, M., Kaushanskaya, M., *Gutierrez, R., & Shapiro, L.P. (2012). Bilingual language processing and cognitive support mechanisms: A multi-level examination. Seminar presented to the annual convention of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, Atlanta, GA. 98. *Gutierrez, R., Walenski, M., *Steele, E., Wright, H., & Shapiro, L.P. 2013. What big eyes you have!: Using pupillometry to measure online sentence processing in monolinguals and bilinguals. Paper presented to the 11th International Symposium of Psycholinguistics, Tenerife, Spain, March 2013. 99. MacKenzie, S*., Gutierrez, R., Walenski, M., Love, T., Shapiro, L.P. 2013. The auditory comprehension of Who and Which-NP questions: Which account do the data support? Paper presented to the 11th Symposium of Psycholinguistics, Tenerife, Spain, March 2013. 100. Walenski, M. Heldrith, A., *Ferrill, M., Shapiro, L.P., Love, T. 2013. Idiom Comprehension during sentence processing in children with autism. Paper presented to the 11th Symposium of Psycholinguistics, Tenerife, Spain, March 2013. 101. *MacKenzie, S., Love, T., *Gutierrez, R., Walenski, M., Shapiro, L.P. 2013. Comprehension of Who and Which-NP questions in aphasia: Which account do the data support. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Tucson, AZ, May 2013. 102. *MacKenzie, S., Walenski, M., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2013. The auditory comprehension of Who and Which-NP questions in aphasia: Support for the Intervener Account. Paper presented to the annual conference of the Society for the Neurobiology of Language, San Diego, November 2013. 103. *Sullivan, N., Walenski, M., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2013. Online processing of unaccusative verbs in individuals with aphasia. Paper presented to the annual conference of the Society for the Neurobiology of Language, San Diego, November 2013. 104. Sullivan, N., MacKenzie, S., Walenski, M., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2014. The auditory processing of unaccusative verbs in individuals with aphasia. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, St. Simons Island, GA.

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105. *Engel, S., Waldman, Z., Schwartz, R., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2014. Online Processing of pronouns in children with Specific Language Impairment. Paper presented to the 2014 IASCL conference, Amsterdam, Netherlands. 106. *Besserman, A., Shapiro, L.P., & Love, T. 2014. There was… something new! Discourse-based predictions during language comprehension. Paper presented to the 2nd Conference of the American Pragmatics Association, Los Angeles, CA. 107. *MacKenzie, S., Walenski, M., Love, T., *Ferrill, M., *Engel, S., *Sullivan, N., Harris Wright, H., & Shapiro, L.P. 2014. The impact of similarity-based interference in processing Wh-questions in aphasia. Paper presented to the Academy of Aphasia. Miami, FL. 108. *Ferrill, M., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2014. The effect of syntactic and semantic cues on lexical access in Broca’s aphasia. Paper presented to the Academy of Aphasia. Miami, FL. 109. *Sullivan, N., Walenski, M., *MacKenzie, S, *Ferrill, M., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2014. The time-course of lexical reactivation of unaccusative verbs in Broca’s aphasia. Paper presented to the Academy of Aphasia. Miami, FL. 110. *Besserman, A., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2015. Anticipatory processes in language comprehension: The English existential as an indicator of newness. Paper presented to the annual conference of Experimental Pragmatics, Chicago, IL. 111. *Besserman, A., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2015. Discourse-based effects in comprehension: When hearers expect new information. Paper presented to the Third ANPOLL International Psycholinguistics Congress, Rio de Janeirio, Brazil. 112. *Engel, S., Love, T., & Shapiro, L.P. 2015. Online processing of pronouns in individuals with Broca’s aphasia. Paper presented to the Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Monterey, CA. 113. *Sheppard, S.M., Midgley, K.J., Love, T., *Yang, D., Holcomb, P.J, & Shapiro, L.P. 2015. Electrophysiology of sentence processing in aphasia: Prosodic cues and thematic fit. Paper presented to the 53rd Annual Meeting of the Academy of Aphasia, Tucson, AZ. 114. Shapiro, L.P, & Wright, H.H. 2015. Intervener effects in aphasia. Paper presented to the Experimental Psycholinguistics Conference, Madrid, Spain. 115. Wright, H.H., Frisco, N., Henderson, A., Kintz, S., & Shapiro, L.P. 2015. Multi-level linguistic processes in aphasia. Paper presented to the Experimental Psycholinguistics Conference, Madrid, Spain. 116. *Sheppard, S.M., Midgley, K.J., Love, T., Shapiro, L.P., & Holcomb, P.J. 2016. Interaction of prosodic and plausibility cues during sentence processing: Evidence from ERPs. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the Cognitive Neuroscience Society, NY, NY.

INVITED PRESENTATIONS 1. Shapiro, L.P. 1986. Predicate-argument structure and sentence processing. Paper presented to the Southern California Conference on General Linguistics. La Jolla, CA. 2. Shapiro, L.P. Shapiro, L.P. 1988. Real-time sentence processing in normal and aphasic adults. Colloquia: University of Georgia, Athens, GA.; New College of the University of South Florida, Sarasota; Department of Cognitive Sciences, University of California at Irvine, Irvine; Neurolinguistics Laboratory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. 3. Shapiro, L.P. 1989. Linguistic impairments as evidence for normal language capacity. Paper presented to Formal Linguistics: Theory and Implementation, Vancouver.

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4. Shapiro, L.P. 1989. Charting the course of sentence processing. Colloquia: Georgia State University, Atlanta; Brown University, Providence, RI; University of British Columbia, Vancouver; Indiana University, Bloomington; Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL. 5. Shapiro, L.P. 1989. Implications of psycholinguistic and linguistic theories for intervention with adult language disorders. Seminar presented to Crossroads Conference on Communication Disorders, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN. 6. Shapiro, L.P. 1990. The psychology of language. Social Sciences Seminar, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton. 7. Shapiro, L.P. 1991. The processing reality of linguistic representations. Linguistics colloquium, Florida International University, Miami. 8. Shapiro, L.P. 1992. The use (and mis-use) of linguistic theory in neurolinguistics. Keynote address presented to the 25th International Congress of Psychology, Brussels, Belgium. 9. Shapiro, L.P. 1992. The linguistic underpinnings of sentence processing in normal and aphasic adults. Colloquium, Department of Neurology, University of Florida. 10. Shapiro, L.P. 1993. Lexical properties and their use in sentence processing. Linguistics colloquium, Florida International University, Miami. 11. Shapiro, L.P. & *Nagel, H.N. 1994. Lexical properties, prosody, and syntax. Invited symposium: Agrammatism. Presented to TENNET V, Montreal. 12. Shapiro, L.P. 1994. Sentence processing in normal and aphasic populations. Paper presented to the Palm Beach County Speech-Language Pathology Group, Boynton Beach. 13. Shapiro, L.P. 1994. On-line sentence processing: Lexical, syntactic, and prosodic factors. Language and Cognition Colloquium Series, Northwestern University, Chicago. 14. Shapiro, L.P. & Swinney, D.A. 1994. Lexical and sentence processing. Presented to the Linguistics, Cognitive Science, & Childhood Language Disorders Conference. CUNY, NY. 15. Shapiro, L.P. 1994. Treatment of adult language disorders. Presented to the Linguistics, Cognitive Science, & Childhood Language Disorders Conference, CUNY, NY. 16. Shapiro, L.P. 1996. Contextual influences on sentence processing. Colloquium, University of California, San Diego. 17. Shapiro, L.P. 1996. Sentence processing: The role of context. Colloquium, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway. 18. Shapiro, L.P. 1996. Prosody and parsing. Colloquium, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway. 19. Shapiro, L.P. 1997. New evidence for the contextual-impenetrability of sentence processing. Workshop on agrammatism. Groningen, The Netherlands. 20. Shapiro, L.P. 1997. On-line processing of long distance dependencies. Paper presented to the 20th Annual Linguistics Colloquium. San Diego State University. 21. Thompson, C.K., & Shapiro, L.P. 1998. Linguistic-specific treatment: An update. Paper presented to the Treatment Efficacy Conference, Nashville, TN. 22. Shapiro, L.P. 1998. The processing of long-distance dependencies during sentence comprehension. Colloquium, Center for Complex Systems, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton. 23. Shapiro, L.P. 1999. Temporally activated lexical and structural knowledge. Brandeis University 50th Anniversary Colloquium Series. Waltham, MA. 24. Schwartz, R., Shapiro, L.P., & Swinney, D.A. 1999. Current ideas in the training of speech- language pathologists. University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.

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25. Shapiro, L.P., & Swinney, D.A. 1999. Language processing in aphasia. University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway. 26. Swinney, D.A., & Shapiro, L.P. 1999. The temporal unfolding of language processing: Neurologically-intact. University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway. 27. Shapiro, L.P. 1999. Linguistically-informed treatment for sentence production and comprehension deficits in aphasia. University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway. 28. Shapiro, L.P. 2000. Neurolinguistics and aphasia therapy. 9th International Aphasia Rehabilitation Conference. Rotterdam, The Netherlands. 29. Hestvik, A., & Shapiro, L.P. 2001. The time-course of VP ellipsis and VP anaphor reconstruction. Workshop on the acquisition and processing of ellipsis. University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA. 30. Swinney, D., Shapiro, L.P., & Hestvik, A. 2001. The role of lexical knowledge in guiding ellipsis during sentence comprehension. German Linguistic Society: Workshop on Lexical Information and Sentence Comprehension, Leipzig. 31. Shapiro, L.P. 2003. Adult language processing, disorders, and treatment. Paper presented to the 33rd Mid-South Conference on Communicative Disorders, University of Memphis, Memphis, TN. 32. Shapiro, L.P., Swinney, D., & Maas, E. 2003. The contributions of lexical and structural information language comprehension. Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Orcas Island, WA. 33. Shapiro, L.P. 2004 (June). Treating language deficits in Broca’s aphasia. Broca’s Region workshop. Aachen, Germany. 34. Shapiro, L.P. 2004 (June). Lexical properties, syntax, and sentence comprehension. University of Warsaw, Poland. 35. Shapiro, L.P. (with C.K. Thompson). 2004 (November). Current approaches to aphasia Intervention: Part I. American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, Philadelphia, PA. 36. Shapiro, L.P. 2007. What cross-modal tasks can do for you. Workshop: On-line Spoken Sentence Processing. University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands. 37. Shapiro, L.P. 2007. Verb phase ellipsis in aphasia. Workshop: On-line Spoken Sentence Processing. University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands. 38. Shapiro, L.P. 2007. A psycholinguistic perspective on treating language disorders in aphasia. Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland. 39. Shapiro, L.P., 2007. What we (think we) know about syntax and the brain. Clinical Aphasiology Conference, Scottsdale, AZ. 40. Shapiro, L.P., 2009. Processing verbs in sentences. Arizona State University, Department of Speech & Hearing Science, Tempe, AZ. 41. Shapiro, L.P., 2009. Working memory in sentence processing. Rush University Medical Center, Communication Disorders and Sciences, Chicago, IL. 42. Shapiro, L.P., 2010. A linguistic toolkit: Argument structure and meaning. SDSU Assessment and Treatment Conference, San Diego, CA. 43. Shapiro, L.P., 2010. Measuring on-line sentence processing with event-related pupillometry. 5th Annual Eleanor M. Saffron Cognitive Neuroscience Conference, Philadelphia, PA. 44. Shapiro, L.P., 2011. Pupillometric indices of sentence processing. Arizona State University, Department of Speech & Hearing Science, Tempe, AZ.

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PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS AND CONFERENCES: Academy of Aphasia (Program Committee; 1994-1996; Membership Committee, 2003-2005) American Psychological Society American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (Committee on Language Science, 1991, 2011; Aphasia Subcommittee Chair, 1992) Academy of Neurologic Communication Disorders and Sciences (Chair, Scientific Affairs, 1998-2000) Clinical Aphasiology (Program Committee, 2000; Program Committee, 2003; Program Chair, 2005; Conference Chair, 2006) CUNY Human Sentence Processing (Program Committee, 2000)

Other Professional Activities. Reviewer for: Department of Veteran Affairs: Rehabilitation Research & Development Merit Review Board (standing member) The NIH LCOM study section (2005-2009), and intermittent ad hoc reviewer National Science Foundation American Speech-Language-Hearing Association Israel Science Foundation Brain and Language (past member of Editorial Board); Journal of Psycholinguistic Research (current member of Editorial Board); Cognition; Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research; Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition; Journal of Memory and Language; American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology; Language and Cognitive Processes; Motor and Perceptual Skills; Neuropsychologia; Neuroimage; Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience; Human Brain Mapping; Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences; Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society

UNIVERSITY SERVICE: Florida Atlantic University: Department of Psychology Committees (1989-1995): Personnel, Curriculum, Resource (chair); University Research Committee, 1993-1995 San Diego State University (summary): Speech-Language Division Head (1997-2002; 2005- 2008); Acting Chair (1998). Merit Committee (1996-1998); Faculty Advisory Committee (1999-2001); College Personnel (2003-2004; 2009-2011); Graduate Council & Curriculum subcommittee (1997-2000), Academic Senate (2000-2003). University Promotion and Tenure Committee (2001-2003); Student Outcomes representative (2009-).

MA Thesis (director): Kerry Ortega (Psych) Elizabeth Oster (Speech-Language) Betsy Gordon (Psych) Lesli Lesan (Speech-Language) Susan Borsky (Psych) Chenoa Perkins (Speech-Language) Bari Brookins (Psych) Margarita Timoteo (Speech-Language) Ana Vianna (Ling) Sara Violett (Speech-Language) Amber Hogan (Speech-Language)

17 Lewis P. Shapiro (2016)

Ph.D. STUDENTS: Previous Doctoral Students (director): Patrick McNamara 1992 [Neuropsychology]; currently Boston University School of Medicine. Nicholas Nagel 1994 [Psychology]; currently, Sun Microsystems. Joanna Raczaszek 1996 [Complex Systems and Brain Sciences]; currently University of Warsaw. James Lewis 1996 [Psychology]; currently IBM, Boca Raton, FL. Susan Borsky 1998 [Psychology]; retired. Naama Friedmann [post-doctoral fellow]; currently Tel Aviv University Elizabeth Samimi 2006 [Language and Communicative Disorders]; currently Sharp Hospital. Ryan Downey 2006 [Language and Communicative Disorders]; currently Ordinate Corp. Dieuwke de Goede 2007, Center for Language and Cognition, University of Groningen; currently Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics Josée Poirier 2009 [Language and Communicative Disorders]; currently, MeYouHealth.com Roberto Gutierrez 2013 Michelle Ferrill 2015 [Language and Communicative Disorders]; currently, VAMC, Pittsburgh. Dorothy Yang 2015 [Language and Communicative Disorders]

Other Major Contributions: Nada Vasic (2006), Linguistics, Utrecht University

Current Doctoral Students: SDSU/UCSD: Samantha Engel (5th year), Shannon MacKenzie (5th year), Natalie Sullivan (4rd year).

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