Publications
(1988). Regularity and Idiomaticity in Grammatical Constructions: The Case of Let Alone.
Language. 64(3), 501-538.
(2003). Resolving the Question of Color Naming Universals.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 100(15), 9085-9089.
(2004). Color Categories Are Not Arbitrary.
Journal of Cross-Cultural Research.
(2004). Color Naming and Sunlight.
Psychological Science. 15, 288-289.
(2004). Color Naming and Sunlight: Commentary on Lindsey and Brown.
Psychological Science. 15(4), 289-290.
(2005). Argument Constructions and the Argument-Adjunct Distinction.
71-98.
(2005). Color Naming Lens Aging and Grue: What the Optics of the Aging Eye Can Teach Us About Color Language.
Psychological Science. 16(4), 321-327.
(2005). Focal Colors Are Universal After All.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 102(23), 8386-8391.
(2005). 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). Variations in Color Naming Within and Across Populations.
Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 28(4), 512-513.
(2005). Variations in Normal Color Vision. IV. Binary Hues and Hue Scaling.
Journal of the Optical Society of America A. 22(10), 2154-2168.
(2005). The World Color Survey Database: History and Use.
224-242.
(2006). Individual and Population Differences in Focal Colors.
29-54.
(2006). Language, Thought, and Color: Recent Developments.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 10(2), 51-54.
(2006). 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.
(2007). Color Naming Is Near Optimal.
15.
(2007). Color Naming Reflects Optimal Partitions of Color Space.
104(4), 1436-1441.
(2007). Color Naming Universals: The Case of Berinmo.
Cognition. 102(2), 289-298.
(2007). Further Evidence That Whorfian Effects Are Stronger in the Right Visual Field Than the Left.
104(3), 1097-1102.
(2008). Categorical Perception of Color is Lateralized to the Right Hemisphere in Infants, but to the Left Hemisphere in Adults.
105(9), 3221-3225.
(2008). Lateralization of Categorical Perception of Color Changes with Color Term Acquisition.
105(47), 18221-18225.
(2008). Support for Lateralization of the Whorf Effect Beyond the Realm of Color Discrimination.
Brain and Language. 105(2), 91-98.

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