What's the story, Morning Glory?
Lip service
Networking is about perception
Sentence comprehension
(I ran out of creative category names)
Potpourri
100
This type of language, commonly referred to as social-communication.

What are pragmatics?

100

An abstract representation that includes syntactic and conceptual information about a word but not phonology. 

What is a lemma?

100

This describes how humans perceive phonemic differences between categories but not within categories. 

What is categorial perception?

100

Four factors that minimize syntactic ambiguity.

What is context, thematic relations, frequency-based information, and syntactic frames? 

100

Semantic priming has this effect on spoken word processing.

What is a facilitatory effect?

200

Grice's conversational maxims.

What are relation, quantity, quality, & manner?

200

The stages of speech planning from first to last. 

What are concepts, lemma, lexical, sublexical, & articulation?

200
This model of spoken word recognition says that related concepts are interconnected. 

What is the spreading activation model?

200

Until the police arrest the drug dealers control the streets is an example of this type of sentence.

What is a garden path sentence?

200

Fillers, such as "uh" and "um" usually occur in this part of an utterance. 

What is an utterance boundary (phrases; clauses)?

300

You create this when encoding detailed information above and beyond the linguistic code. 

What is a mental model?

300

Retrieval of only part of a word, usually its conceptual information, is referred to as this. 

What is tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon? 

300

This model predicts spoken words that overlap at onset and offset will compete for recognition. 

What is the TRACE model?

300

Constructing (in your mind) noun phrases, verb phrases, adjective phrases, and so on when you hear a sentence.

What is parsing?

300

The Ganong effect is a good example of how this can be used to aid in speech perception. 

What is lexical context?

400

When communication partners try to figure out similarities between them during conversation.

What is establishing common ground?

400

Saying shift sugar instead of sift sugar is an example of this type of speech error.

What is a phonemic anticipation error? 
400
The issue that there is no one-to-one mapping of acoustics to phoneme. 

What is the lack of invariance problem?

400
Comprehending word-by-word as a sentence unfolds over time and updating your mental model of the sentence as you receive more information is an example of this.

What is incrementality? 

400

Quick and dirty information processing that may result in errors. 

What is a heuristic? 

500

Introducing a referent before you using a pronoun, such as "she", shows the speaker has this skill. 

What is presupposition? 

500

The fact you are more likely to produce the speech error darn bore for barn door is an example of this. 

What are lexically biased errors?

500

Being slower to look at a picture of a kitchen when you hear the word kitten is an example of this type of inhibitory effect in spoken word processing? 

What is cohort competition? 

500

Considering multiple interpretations of sentence meaning when you hear a spoken sentence is best described by this. 

What is the constraint-based approach?

500
The mental manipulation and short term storage of information that has been implicated in sentence processing. 

What is working memory?