(formerly Catherine Harris; I married Edmond Caldwell May 2005)
Associate Professor of Psychology Office: Rm 123 Phone: (617) 353-2956 Lab: Rms 127-129 Information about Research Internship (see also Lab page) Curriculum vitae (cv with links to publications, html) |
![]() |
Semester |
Number |
Title |
Course Overview |
| Spring 2008 | Sabbatical | Conducted research for the Chiang Ching-Kuo Foundation (see cv) | Press release (html) |
| Fall 2008 | PS 241 | Developmental Psychology MWF 1-3 | courseinfo.bu.edu general overview |
| Spring 2009 | PS 545 | Language Development | Fall 07 (doc) |
| Spring 2009 | PS 560 | Cross-Cultural Psychology | Syllabus (pdf) |
| Fall 2009 | Application Pending to conduct research in Turkey | Proposal (doc) |
I was trained at UC San Diego, 1985-1991, where I learned from Elizabeth Bates, Jeff Elman, David Rumelhart, Rama Ramachandran, Ronald Langacker, Patricia Churchland and (via CMU) Brian MacWhinney and Jay McClelland (and of course many other wonderful teachers and scholars). I have been a faculty member at BU since 1991.
My research interests are broad, encompassing diverse aspects of language processing, including second language acquisition, emotional aspects of language, and word recognition. I am the first researcher to document that emotion words elicit larger skin conductance responses in a first language than in a second (see paper in Applied Psycholinguistics, pdf). I am currently studying emotional reactivity in the U.S. for speakers who grew up speaking Russian, Mandarin, or Spanish, as well as English native speakers who learned Russian as a foreign langauge (see powerpoint presentation for overview of this research and forthcoming paper on lying in native vs. foreign language). See also a recent powerpoint which discusses the role of motivation in second language acquisition. I am also interested in how units larger than single words are important for fluency and efficiency in all types of language processing (for both first and second language).
In word recognition, I have expertise in an intriguing visual/cognition illusion called repetition blindness. I have shown how illusory words can be created by embedding word fragments in the visual stream, as in "pain grain avy" (leads to report of "gravy" (see, for example, my paper with Alison Morris, in pdf). I have used repetition blindness and the same/difference task to investigate how diacritic letters are represented in Turkish. With German colleagues Martin Heil and Michael Niedeggen I have used this technique to explore consciousness (see our paper in Neuroreport). We conclude that what viewers perceive is more important for subsequent brain states and processing than what is actually in the visual input. A new model of repetition blindness and orthographic priming is forthcoming from the journal Cognitive Psychology.
In my cross-cultural research, I am the originator (with Ayse Aycicegi) of the Personality-Culture Clash hypothesis. We propose that mental health is facilitated by having a personality in tune with cultural values.
Event |
Location |
Date |
Topic |
Co-authors |
| Cognitive Science Society |
Washington D.C. |
July 23-26 2008 |
Tracks in the Mind: Differential Entrenchment of Common and
Rare Liturgical and Everyday Multiword Phrases in Religious and Secular Hebrew Speakers |
Berant, Edelman |
| American Psychological Association | Boston |
August 14-17 2008 |
Session: Religion and Spirituality---Personality and Social Development abstract | Elizabeth LoTempio, Chloe Jordan |
| Psychonomic Society | Chicago |
November 13-16 2008 |
Fast Pairs: A visual word recognition paradigm for measuring entrenchment, top-down effects, and subjective phenomenology | |
| Cognitive Neuroscience Society | San Francisco | March 21-24 2009 |
TBA |
Jimmy Tong |
| American Association for Applied Linguistics | Denver | March 21-24 | TBA |
Hui-wen Cheng |
| American Psychological Association | Toroto | August 6-9 2009 |
"Jokes, Lies and Scenarios: Emotional responses to a second language facilitates acquisition in the classroom" |
Ayse Aycicegi-Dinn |
Why so slow? Video of Virginia Valian's lecture at MIT