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Announcement

Cognitive Neuropsychology

Student Travel Prize September 2014 Winners

On behalf of Routledge and the Editors of Cognitive Neuropsychology, we are delighted to confirm the three winning abstracts of the Cognitive Neuropsychology Student Travel Prize September 2014 competition:

Maria M. Arredondo

Developmental Psychology, University of Michigan, USA

Bilingualism alters children's prefrontal activation during a non-verbal attention task

Presented at the Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) 3rd Biennial Conference, October 10–12 2014, Montreal

Heather Dial

Brain and Language Lab, Rice University, USA

Shared perceptual processes in phoneme and word perception: Evidence from aphasia

Stacey Rimikis

Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, New York University, USA

Combinatorial Processing in Irregular Forms: Evidence from Aphasia

Heather and Stacey's works were presented at the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Academy of Aphasia, October 5–7, 2014, Miami

Many applications were judged by the Editor and Action Editors of the journal, making this a very competitive award. The three successful abstracts were selected on the basis of their scientific merit and for their contribution to the field of Cognitive Neuropsychology.

Congratulations to the prize recipients! We wish all applicants great success with your conference participation and in your future research.For further information on the Student Travel Prize see the journal website at www.tandfonline.com/pcgn.

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