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Neil W. Kirk
Neil W. Kirk
Verified email at abertay.ac.uk - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
No evidence for reduced Simon cost in elderly bilinguals and bidialectals
NW Kirk, L Fiala, KC Scott-Brown, V Kempe
Journal of Cognitive Psychology 26 (6), 640-648, 2014
1552014
Can monolinguals be like bilinguals? Evidence from dialect switching
NW Kirk, V Kempe, KC Scott-Brown, A Philipp, M Declerck
Cognition 170, 164-178, 2018
712018
Language control in regional dialect speakers–monolingual by name, bilingual by nature?
NW Kirk, M Declerck, RJ Kemp, V Kempe
Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 25 (3), 511-520, 2022
302022
Individual differences in the discrimination of novel speech sounds: effects of sex, temporal processing, musical and cognitive abilities
V Kempe, JC Thoresen, NW Kirk, F Schaeffler, PJ Brooks
PloS one 7 (11), e48623, 2012
262012
Revisiting theoretical and causal explanations for the bilingual advantage in executive functioning
V Kempe, NW Kirk, PJ Brooks
Cortex 73, 342-344, 2015
242015
MIND your language (s): Recognizing Minority, Indigenous, Non-standard (ized), and Dialect variety usage in “monolinguals”
NW Kirk
Applied Psycholinguistics 44 (3), 358-364, 2023
162023
Do older Gaelic-English bilinguals show an advantage in inhibitory control?
N Kirk, K Scott-Brown, V Kempe
Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society 35 (35), 2013
152013
Cognitive cost of switching between standard and dialect varieties
N Kirk, M Declerck, KC Scott-Brown, V Kempe, A Philipp
20th Annual Conference on Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing, 2014
102014
Is there proactive inhibitory control during bilingual and bidialectal language production?
M Declerck, E Özbakar, NW Kirk
PloS one 16 (9), e0257355, 2021
82021
No evidence for a mixing benefit—A registered report of voluntary dialect switching
M Declerck, NW Kirk
Plos one 18 (5), e0282086, 2023
62023
Is it easier to use one language variety at a time, or mix them? An investigation of voluntary language switching with bidialectals
M Declerck, NW Kirk
PloS one 16 (9), e0256554, 2021
42021
How well can listeners distinguish dialects and unfamiliar languages?
NW Kirk, V Kempe, K Scott-Brown
54th Annual Meeting of the Psychonomics Society, 2013
42013
Listen to yourself! Prioritization of self‐associated and own voice cues
NW Kirk, SJ Cunningham
British Journal of Psychology 116 (1), 131-148, 2025
22025
“Eh? Aye!”: Categorisation bias for natural human vs AI-enhanced voices is influenced by dialect.
NW Kirk
OSF, 2024
12024
Shared or separate: Control processes of cross-and within-language interference
GP Williams, NW Kirk, M Sánchez, Z Afshar, Y Wen
PsyArXiv, 2023
12023
Implicit Sequence Learning in Applied Game Design
N Panayotov, GP Williams, NW Kirk, V Kempe
PsyArXiv, 2020
12020
Accentuate the self: Prioritization of self-associated external voices is enhanced by accent matching.
NW Kirk
OSF, 2025
2025
Humans vs AI: Can listeners tell the difference? Study 2
NW Kirk
OSF, 2024
2024
Counselling clients in financial hardship–making things better by listening to clients
E Ferguson, M Thurston, A Law, N Kirk, K Smith
30th Annual International BACP Research Conference: Enriching research …, 2024
2024
Scottish Voices: Examining classification of speaker variation in Scotland
V Kempe, NW Kirk, M Brzoska, H Benharraf
OSF, 2024
2024
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