Judith F. Kroll
University of California, Irvine
153 Papers
796 Citations
Judith F. Kroll is an academic researcher from University of California, Irvine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neuroscience of multilingualism & First language. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 148 publications. Previous affiliations of Judith F. Kroll include Mount Holyoke College & Pennsylvania State University.
Chat about Author
Papers
Strategies in sentence—picture verification: The effect of an unexpected picture
Judith F. Kroll,Ann Corrigan +1 more
TL;DR: This article found that subjects who had been producing an inverted-U-shaped function switched to a linear function after presentation of the unexpected pictures, suggesting that representational format may be changed according to task demands.
29
Cognitive Control Facilitates Attentional Disengagement during Second Language Comprehension.
TL;DR: Eye-movement results showed that Stroop-related conflict improved the ability to engage correct-goal interpretations, and disengage incorrect- goal interpretations, during ambiguous instructions, suggesting group differences in attentional disengagement following cognitive control recruitment.
28
Neural signatures of inhibitory control in bilingual spoken production.
Eleonora Rossi,Eleonora Rossi,Eleonora Rossi,Sharlene D. Newman,Judith F. Kroll,Michele T. Diaz +5 more
TL;DR: The results show that bilinguals engage a wide functional control network that is hierarchically engaged in local control for single lexical items, but extends further to the broader semantic level, and finally to the whole language.
28
Introduction to bilingualism and cognitive control.
TL;DR: The papers in this special issue on Bilingualism and Cognitive Control represent the best of the new research on each of these issues to understand how control in language processing is achieved and how domain-general cognitive processes are themselves affected by language experience.
Spontaneous Trait Generation: A New Method for Identifying Self-Schemas
TL;DR: In three studies as discussed by the authors, subjects spontaneously generated lists of selfdescriptive traits using a measure of self-schemas the trait generation task, and showed that the traits in the ideal self are also represented as self-shemas.
27