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The top of Pioneer Hall through vibrant fall leaves on the trees.

Kay Livesay

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Kay Livesay
Associate Professor


Pioneer Hall 105

503-883-2708

klivesa@linfield.edu

Professor Livesay specializes in cognitive psychology. Her primary areas of research involve language processing and meaning representation. She leads an active research program with a team of undergraduate students in the psychology department. Students interested in becoming a member of Dr. Livesay’s research team are invited to contact her through email.

Professor Livesay typically teaches PSYC 283 - Introduction to Cognition, PSYC 288 - Psychology of Language, PSYC 252 - Research Methods in Psychology and PSYC 389 - Cognitive Neuroscience.

Education

  • B.S. University of California, Los Angeles
  • M.A., University of California, Riverside
  • Ph.D., University of California, Riverside

Academic interests:

My primary areas of research involve language processing (lexical and sentential). I have an active research program with a team of undergraduate students. We (my undergraduates and I) recently presented new findings at WPA in Irvine. If you are interested in being a member of the team please contact me.

Publications:

  • Livesay, K. & Burgess, C. (2003). Mediated Priming in the Cerebral Hemispheres, Brain & Cognition, 53, 283-286.
  • Burgess, C & Livesay, K. (1998). The effect of corpus size in predicting reaction time in a basic word recognition task: Moving on from Kucera and Francis. Behavior Research Methods, Instrument Computers, 30, 272-277.
  • Livesay, K, & Burgess, C. (1998). Mediated priming in high-dimensional semantic space: No effect of direct semantic relationships or co-occurrence. Brain & Cognition, 37, 102-105.
  • Burgess, C., Livesay, K. & Lund, K. (1998). Explorations in context space: Words, sentences, discourse. Discourse Processes, 25, 211-257.

Personal interests:

I like to cook (and eat), play soccer, hike, garden and read science fiction (not necessarily in that order).