Publications

Found 41 results
Author Title Type [ Year(Desc)]
Filters: Author is Paul Kay  [Clear All Filters]
2003
Kay, P., & Regier T. (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
Kay, P. (2004).  Color Categories Are Not Arbitrary. Journal of Cross-Cultural Research.
Regier, T., & Kay P. (2004).  Color Naming and Sunlight. Psychological Science. 15, 288-289.
Regier, T., & Kay P. (2004).  Color Naming and Sunlight: Commentary on Lindsey and Brown. Psychological Science. 15(4), 289-290.
Kay, P. (2004).  Pragmatic Aspects of Grammatical Constructions.
2005
Kay, P. (2005).  Argument Constructions and the Argument-Adjunct Distinction. 71-98.
Hardy, J.., Frederick C.., Kay P., & Werner J.. (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.
Regier, T., Kay P., & Cook R. S. (2005).  Focal Colors Are Universal After All. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 102(23), 8386-8391.
Cook, R. S., Kay P., & Regier T. (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.
Kay, P., & Webster M. A. (2005).  Variations in Color Naming Within and Across Populations. Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 28(4), 512-513.
Malkoc, G., Kay P., & Webster M. A. (2005).  Variations in Normal Color Vision. IV. Binary Hues and Hue Scaling. Journal of the Optical Society of America A. 22(10), 2154-2168.
Cook, R. S., Kay P., & Regier T. (2005).  The World Color Survey Database: History and Use. 224-242.
2006
Webster, M. A., & Kay P. (2006).  Individual and Population Differences in Focal Colors. 29-54.
Kay, P., & Regier T. (2006).  Language, Thought, and Color: Recent Developments. Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 10(2), 51-54.
Gilbert, A. L., Regier T., Kay P., & Ivry R. B. (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.

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