Day 1: Thursday, July 3rd
8:30 - 9:00 Welcome
9:00 - 10:00 Keynote talk 1 - Angela de Bruin:The importance of both direct and conceptual replication studies when studying language users from different language backgrounds
10:00 - 10:30 Coffee break
10:30 - 11:00 Ditch the lab and embrace the web: Small sample sizes lead to irreplicable results in Psycholinguistics (R. L. Beraldo)
11:00 - 11:30 Mapping links within the network of English Objoid Constructions: A replication study using T-Maze (T. Bouso, M. Hundt & L. Van Driessche)
11:30 - 13:00 Lunch break
13:00 - 13:30 Living meta-analyses in Language Sciences (P. Gomez, M. Perea, B. Angele, M. Vasilev & D. Allbritton)
13:30 - 14:00 How a paradigm and an erratic effect produced a fruitful but unreliable body of literature on grammatical gender processing (A. R. Sá Leite, K. Luna, M. Comesaña & I. Fraga)
14:00 - 14:30 Coffee break
14:30 - 15:00 Grammatical gender and beyond: Uncovering differences across women and men on the interplay between grammatical and emotional processing (L. Vieitez Portas, I. Padrón Rodríguez & I. Fraga Carou.)
15:00 - 15:30 LexOPS: A Reproducible Solution to Stimuli Selection (J. Taylor)
15:30 - 16:00 Low sampling rate is not an obstacle to making reading research more accessible (B. Angele, Z. Gunes Ozkan, M. Serrano-Carot & J. Andoni Duñabeitia)
16:00 - 16:30 Coffee break
16:30 - 17:30 Keynote talk 2 - Timo Roettger: Against replication
18:30 - 20:30 - Social event at TapHouse Frankfurt (Mendelssohnstraße 51, 60325 Frankfurt am Main)
Day 2: Friday, July 4th
9:00 - 10:00 Keynote talk 3 - Anne Beatty-Martínez: Research on Bilingualism as Discovery Science
10:00 - 11:00 Coffee break and poster session
11:00 - 11:30 “Well, I think it's an ongoing struggle in a way”: A qualitative analysis of linguists’ understanding of and attitudes towards replication and open science (E. Le Foll)
11:30 - 12:00 Anonymity as a Challenge for Replicability and Reusability in Open Data: Insights from the German Project "Language Skills of Newly Arrived Students in Mainstream Education" (S. Eisenbeiß, L. Twente, T. Barberio & N. Marx)
12:00 - 13:30 Lunch break
13:30 - 14:00 How replicable are bilingual interactive processing effects? A pre-registered close replication and extension of Dijkstra et al. (1999) (J. Witteman, L. Pablos-Robles, K. Karaseva & J. Wang)
14:00 - 14:30 Challenges of Replication and Restoration of Classic Language Studies (M. Dorin)
14:30 - 15:00 Coffee break
15:00 - 16:00 Keynote talk 4 - Bodo Winter: The Generalizability Crisis in Linguistics: Rethinking Statistical Traditions
20:00 Conference Dinner at Restaurant Lilium (Leipziger Str. 4, 60487 Frankfurt am Main)
List of posters:
Kyle Parrish, Nazanin Darvishi Rokni, Larissa Goncalves Miranda, Selma Inam & Pirthipal Zschernack. A systematic review and analysis of repeated measures designs in Language Learning
Elen Le Foll. Teaching Open Science to Language and Linguistics Students
Timo Roettger. ManyLanguages - Toward Big Team Language Sciences
John Cristian Borges Gamboa, Shaiban Alshaibani, Christopher Allison, Leigh Fernandez and Shanley Allen. Do people predict faster when they are many? Counter-intuitive Divergence Point Analysis results