Publications & Presentations

1. Monograph

Horie, Kaoru, and Prashant Pardeshi. 2009. Linguistic Typology. A Cognitive Typological Approach. (in Japanese) Tokyo: Kenkyusha.

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2. Edited volumes

(1) Horie, Kaoru. (ed.) 2000. Complementation: Cognitive and Functional Perspectives. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. (241p.)

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(2) Horie, Kaoru and Sato, Shigeru (eds.) 2001. Cognitive-Functional Linguistics in an East Asian Context. Tokyo: Kurosio publishers. (339p.)

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(3) Sato, Shigeru, Kaoru Horie, and Wataru Nakamura (eds.) 2004. New Trends in Contrastive Linguistics. (in Japanese) Tokyo: Hituzi publishers. (548p.)

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(4) The Science of Language, Brain, and Cognition, and Foreign Language Learning (Hituzi publishers, 2009, in Japanese)

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(5) Hirakawa, Makiko, Shunji Inagaki, Setsuko Arita, Yuko Goto Butler, Kaoru Horie, Eric Hauser, Yasuhiro Shirai, and Jessica Tsubakita (eds.), 2010 Studies in Language Sciences 9 Toyo: Kurosio publishers.

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3. Selected Refereed papers (citing English publications only)

  1. Horie, Kaoru. 1990a. “How Languages Encode the Cognitive Notion of Directness and Indirectness: A Typological Study.” In: Hoji, Hajime. (ed.), Japanese/Korean Linguistics. Stanford: CSLI [distributed by Cambridge University Press], 61-77.
  2. Horie, Kaoru. 1990b. “Complementation in Moroccan Arabic and the Cognitive Notion of Directness/Indirectness.” Sophia Linguistica 28, 37-45.
  3. Horie, Kaoru. 1991a. “Cognitive Motivations for Event Nominalizations.” In: Nichols, Lynn et al. (ed.), Papers from the Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society (CLS), 27-1, 233-245.
  4. Horie, Kaoru. 1991b. “Event Nominalizations in Korean and Japanese: A Cognitive Perspective.” In: Kuno, Susumu et al. (ed.), Harvard Studies in Korean Linguistics 4, Seoul: Hanshin publishers, 503-12.
  5. Horie, Kaoru. 1993a. “From Zero to Overt Nominalizer No: A Syntactic Change in Japanese.” In: Choi, Soonja. (ed.), Japanese/Korean Linguistics 3. Stanford: CSLI [distributed by Cambridge University Press], 305-321.
  6. Horie, Kaoru. 1993b. “Internally Headed Relative Clauses in Korean and Japanese: Where Do the Differences Come from?” In: Kuno, Susumu et al. (eds.), Harvard Studies in Korean Linguistics 5. Seoul: Hanshin publishers, 449-458.
  7. Horie, Kaoru. 1995. “What the Choice of Overt Nominalizer No Did to Modern Japanese Syntax and Semantics.” In: Henning Andersen. (ed.), Historical Linguistics 1993. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 191-203.
  8. Comrie, Bernard, and Kaoru Horie. 1995. “Complement Clauses versus Relative Clauses: Some Khmer Evidence.” In: Abraham, Werner, et al. (eds.), Discourse Grammar and Typology. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 65-75.
  9. Horie, Kaoru. 1997a. “Three Types of Nominalization in Modern Japanese: No, Koto and Zero.” Linguistics 35-5, 879-894.
  10. Horie, Kaoru. 1997b. “Form-meaning Interaction in Diachrony: A Case Study from Japanese.” English Linguistics 14, 428-449.
  11. Horie, Kaoru. 1997c. “Reanalysis as a Means of "Recycling" Conventionalized Expressions: A Case Study from Japanese.” In: Caron, Bernard (ed.), Proceedings of the 16th International Congress of Linguists. (CD-Rom Version Paper No. 0400) New Jersey: Elsevier.
  12. Horie, Kaoru. 1998a. “Functional Duality of Case-marking Particles in Japanese and its Implications for Grammaticalization: A Contrastive Study with Korean.” In: Silva, David. (ed.), Japanese/Korean Linguistics 8. Stanford: CSLI [distributed by Cambridge University Press], 147-159.
  13. Horie, Kaoru. 1998b. “On the Polyfunctionality of the Japanese Particle No: From the Perspectives of Ontology and Grammaticalization.” In: Ohori, Toshio. (ed.), Studies in Japanese Grammaticalization: Cognitive and Discourse Perspectives. Tokyo: Kurosio Publishers, 169-192.
  14. Horie, Kaoru. 1999. “From Core to Periphery: A Study on the Directionality of Syntactic Change in Modern Japanese.” In: Fox, Barbara A., Dan Jurafsky, and Laura A. Michaelis. (eds.), Cognition and Function in Language. Stanford: CSLI, 1-14.
  15. Horie, Kaoru. 2000a. “Core-oblique Distinction and Nominalizer Choice in Japanese and Korean.” Studies in Language 24.1, 77-102.
  16. Horie, Kaoru. 2000b. “Complementation in Japanese and Korean: A Contrastive and Cognitive Linguistic Approach.” In: Kaoru Horie (ed.), Complementation: Cognitive and Functional Perspectives. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 11-31.
  17. Horie, Kaoru, and Bongshik, Kang. 2000. “Action/State Continuum and Nominative-Genitive Conversion in Japanese and Korean.” In: Kikusawa, Ritsuko, and Kan Sasaki (eds.), Modern Approaches to Transitivity. Tokyo: Kuroshio Publishers, 93-114.
  18. Horie, Kaoru, and Yuko, Sassa. 2000. “From Place to Space to Discourse: A Contrastive LinguisticAnalysis of Tokoro and Tey.” In: Nakayama, Mineharu, and Charles J. Quinn, Japanese/ Korean Linguistics 9. Stanford: CSLI [distributed by Cambridge University Press], 181-194.
  19. Horie, Kaoru. 2001. “Complement clauses.” In: Haspelmath, Martin, Ekkehard Koenig,Wulf Oesterreicher, and Wolfgang Raible (eds), Handbook of Language Typology and Language Universals. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 979-993.
  20. Horie, Kaoru, and Debra Occhi. 2001. “Cognitive Linguistics Meets Language Contact: A Case of Getto-suru in Japanese.” In: Horie, Kaoru, and Shigeru Sato (eds.), Cognitive-Functional Linguistics in an East Asian Context. Tokyo: Kurosio publishers, 13-33.
  21. Horie, Kaoru. 2002a. “Verbal Nouns in Japanese and Korean: Cognitive Typological Implications.” Kataoka, Kuniyoshi and Sachiko Ide (eds.), Culture, Interaction, Language. Tokyo: Hituzi publishers, 77-101.
  22. Horie, Kaoru. 2002b. “A Comparative Typological Account of Japanese and Korean Morpho-Syntactic Contrasts.” Eonehag 32 (The Linguistic Society of Korea): 9-32.
  23. Horie, Kaoru, and Kaori Taira. 2002. “Where Korean and Japanese Differ: Modality vs. Discourse Modality.” In: Akatsuka, Noriko, and Susan Strauss. (eds.), Japanese/ Korean Linguistics 10. Stanford: CSLI [distributed by Cambridge University Press], 178-191.
  24. Horie, Kaoru, and Tetsuharu Moriya. 2002. “Two Negation Forms in Korean: A Typological and Contrastive Approach.” In: S.O. Lee and G. K. Iverson (eds.), Pathways into Korean Language and Culture: Essays in Honor of Young-key Kim-Renaud, Seoul: Pagijong Press, 103-118.
  25. Moriya, Tetsuharu, and Kaoru Horie. 2002. “Grammaticalization and Semantic Typology: Time-relationship Adverbs in Japanese, Korean, English, and German.” In: Lee, Ik-Hwan, Yong-Beom Kim, Key-Sun Choi, and Mihaeng Lee (eds.), Proceedings of the 16th Pacific Asia Conference. Seoul: The Korean Society for Language and Information, 348-357.
  26. Horie, Kaoru. 2003. “Differential Manifestations of “Modality” between Japanese and Korean: A Typological Perspective.” In: Imanishi, Noriko et al. (eds), S. Chiba et al. (eds.), Empirical and Theoretical Investigations Into Language, Tokyo: Kaitakusya, 205-216.
  27. Tetesuharu, Moriya, and Kaoru Horie. “Constrains on Grammaticalization:A Case Study of Time-relationship Adverbs.” In: Imanishi, Noriko et al. (eds), S. Chiba et al. (eds.), Empirical and Theoretical Investigations Into Language, Tokyo: Kaitakusya, 435-446.
  28. Wako, Masakazu, Kaoru Horie, and Shigeru Sato. 2003. “Reconstructing Temporal Structures in Korean Texts: A Contrastive Study with Japanese.” In: Clancy, Patricia (ed.), Japanese /Korean Linguistics 11. Stanford, CA: CSLI Publications, 203-216.
  29. Wako, Masakazu, Shigeru Sato, and Karu Horie. 2003. “From Progressive to Perfect: A Corpus-based Study of the “Perfect” Meaning of the Korean Progressive Form -ko iss-.” In: McClure, William (ed.), Japanese /Korean Linguistics 12. Stanford, CA: CSLI Publications, 64-74.
  30. Moriya, Tetsuharu, and Kaoru Horie. 2003. “On the Coexistence of Two Forms of Sentence Negation in Korean: A Functional Typological Perspective.” Gregory K. Iversion and Sang-Cheol Ahn (eds.) Explorations in Korean Language and Linguistics. Seoul: Hankook Publishing Co., 459-469.
  31. Horie, Kaoru. 2003. "What Cognitive Linguistics Can Reveal about Complementation in Non-IE Languages: Case studies from Japanese and Korean." Eugene H.Casad and Gary B Palmer(Eds.), Cognitive Linguistics and Non-Indo European Languages, Mouton de Gruyter, Berlin, New york, 363-388.
  32. Horie, Kaoru, and Miya Shimura. 2003. “Overt Anaphoric Expressions, Empathy, and the Uchi-Soto Distinction in Japanese.” Proceedings of the Second Seoul International Conference on Discourse and Cognitive Linguistics, 297-310.
  33. Horie, Kaoru, and Emi Kondo. 2004. “Subjectification and Synchronic Variation: Two Negation Forms in Kansai Dialect of Japanese.” Achard, Michael, and Suzanne Kemmer (eds.), Language, Culture and Mind. Stanford: CSLI Publications, 445-459.
  34. Yap, Foongha, Stephen Matthews, and Kaoru Horie. 2004. “From Pronominalizer to Pragmatic Marker: Implications for Unidirectionality from a Cross-linguistic Perspective.” Fischer, Olga, et al. (eds.) Up and Down the Cline: The Nature of Grammatiticalization (Typological Studies in Language 57). Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 137-168.
  35. Miura, Naoki, Jobu Watanabe, Kazuki Iwata, Yuko Sassa, Jorge Riera, Hideo Tsuchiya, Shigeru Sato, Kaoru Horie, Makoto Takahashi, Masaharu Kitamura, Ryuta Kawashima. 2005. “Cortical Activation during Reading of Ancient versus Modern Japanese Texts: fMRI Study.” Neuroreport 26, 426-431.
  36. Ishihara, Tsuneyoshi, Kaoru Horie, and Prashant Pardeshi. 2006. What Does the Korean “Double Causative” Reveal about Causation and Korean? A Corpus-Based Contrastive Study with Japanese. In: Vance, Timothy (ed.), Japanese/Korean Linguistics 14. CSLI, 321-330.
  37. Yokoyama S, Okamoto H, Miyamoto T, Yoshimoto K, Kim J, Iwata K, Jeong H, Uchida S, Ikuta N, Sassa Y, Nakamura W, Horie K, Sato S, Kawashima R 2006. “Cortical activation in the processing of passive sentences in L1 and L2: An fMRI study.” Neuroimage 30, 570-579.
  38. Ikuta N, Sugiura M, Sassa Y, Watanabe J, Akitsuki Y, Iwata K, Miura N, Okamoto H, Watanabe, J, Sato S, Horie K, Matsue Y, and Kawashima R.2006. “Brain activation during the course of sentence comprehension.” Brain and Language 97, 154-161, 2006.
  39. Yokoyama S, Miyamoto T, Riera J, Kim J, Akitsuki Y, Iwata K, Yoshimoto K, Horie K, Sato S, and Kawashima R. “Cortical mechanisms involved in the processing of verbs: An fMRI study.” Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 18, 1304-1313, 2006.
  40. Sugiura M, Sassa Y, Jeong H, Miura N, Akitsuki Y, Horie K, Sato S, and Kawashima R. 2006. “Multiple brain networks for visual self-recognition with different sensitivity for motion and body part.” Neuroimage 32, 1905-1917.
  41. Prashant, Pardeshi, Qing-Mei Li, and Kaoru Horie.2007a. Where, How, and Why do Japanese and Korean Passives Differ? A Parallel Corpus Account. In: McGloin, Naomi H.., and Junko Mori (eds.), Japanese/Korean Linguistics 15. Stanford, CA: CSLI, 108-120.
  42. Prashant, Pardeshi, Qing-Mei Li, and Kaoru Horie.2007a. Where, How, and Why do Japanese and Korean Passives Differ? A Parallel Corpus Account. In: McGloin, Naomi H.., and Junko Mori (eds.), Japanese/Korean Linguistics 15. Stanford, CA: CSLI, 108-120.
  43. Prashant, Pardeshi, Qing-Mei Li, and Kaoru Horie. 2007b. Being on the Receiving end: A Tour into Linguistic Variation. In: Matsumoto, Yoshiko et al. (eds.), Diversity in Language: Perspectives and Implications. Stanford, CA: CSLI, 131-166.
  44. Prashant, Pardeshi, Wang, Luming, and Kaoru Horie. 2008. An Anatomy of the “Oblique” Category on the Noun Phrase Accessibility Hierarchy: A Typological Study of Relative Clauses in Marathi, Chinese, Japanese, Adioucrou and English. In: Ogura, Tamiko et al. (eds.), Studies in Language Sciences 7. Kurosio Publishers, 249-264.
  45. Horie, Kaoru, Miya Shimura, and Prashant Pardeshi. 2006. Overt Anaphoric Expressions, Empathy, and the Uchi-Soto Distinction. A Contrastive Perspective. In: Suzuki, Satoko (ed.), Emotive Communication in Japanese. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 173-190.
  46. Horie, Kaoru. 2007. Subjectification and Intersubjectification in Japanese: A Comparative-Typological Perspective. In: Onodera and Suzuki (2007), 311-323.
  47. Horie, Kaoru, Joung-Min Kim, and Mizuho Tamaji. 2007. Where Japanese Contrasts with Korean and Mandarin Chinese: Intersubjectivity, Modality, and the Differential Pragmatic-Semantic Foundations across Languages. Studies in Pragmatics 9 (The Pragmatics Society of Japan), 1-16.
  48. Jeong H, Sugiura M, Sassa Y, Haji T, Usui N, Taira M, Horie, K, Sato S, and Kawashima R. “Effect of syntactic similarity on cortical activation during second language processing: A comparison of English and Japanese among native Korean trilinguals.” Human Brain Mapping 28,194-204. 2007.
  49. Jeong H, Sugiura M, Sassa Y, Yokoyama S, Horie K, Sato S, Taira M, and Kawashima R . 2007. “Cross-linguistic influence on brain activation during second language processing: an fMRI study.” Bilingualism: Language and Cognition. 10, 175-187.
  50. Yokoyama S, Watanabe J, Iwata K, Ikuta N, Haji T, Usui N, Taira M, Miyamoto T, Nakamura W, Sato S, Horie K, and Kawashima R. 2007. “Is Broca's area involved in the processing of passive sentences?: An event-related fMRI study.” Neuropshychologia 45, 989-996.
  51. Sassa Y, Sugiura M, Jeong H, Horie K, Sato S, and Kawashima R. 2007. “Cortical mechanism of communicative speech production.” Neuroimage 37, 985-992.
  52. Wakusawa K, Sugiura M, Sassa Y, Jeong H, Horie K, Sato S, Yokoyama H, Tsuchiya S, Inuma K, and Kawashima R. 2007. “Comprehension of implicit meanings in social situations involving irony: A functional MRI study.” Neuroimage. 37, 1417-1426.
  53. Horie, Kaoru 2008. Grammaticalization of Nominalizers in Japanese and its Theoretical Implications: A Contrastive Study with Korean. In: Seoane, Elena and Maria Jose Lopez-Couso. (eds.), Rethinking Grammaticalization: New Perspective for the Twenty-first Century (Typological Studies in Language 76). John Benjamins, 169-187.
  54. Horie, Kaoru, Prashant Pardeshi, and Guy Kaul. 2008. Transparency vs. Economy. How does Adioukrou Resolve the Conflict? In: Tomaszczyk, Barbara Lewandowska (ed.), Asymmetric Events. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 193-206.
  55. Inoue K, Ito H, Uchida S, Taki Y, Kinomura S, Tsuji I, Sato S, Horie K, Kawashima R, Ito M, and Fukuda H. 2008. “Decrease in glucose metabolism in frontal cortex associated with deterioration of microstructure of corpus callosum measured by diffusion tensor imaging in healthy elderly.” Human Brain Mapping 29, 375-384.
  56. Sugiura M, Sassa Y, Jeong H, Horie K, Sato S, and Kawashima R . 2008. “Face-specific and domain-general characteristics of cortical responses during self-recognition.” Neuroimage. 42:
  57. Wang, Luming, Kaoru Horie, and Prashant Pardeshi 2009. Toward a Functional Typology of Noun Modifying Constructions in Japanese and Chinese: A Corpus-Based Account. In: Inagaki Shunji et al. (eds.) Studies in Language Sciences 8. Tokyo: Kurosio publishers, 213-228.
  58. Kim, Joung-Min and Kaoru Horie. 2009. “ Intersubjectification and Textual Functions of Japanese Noda and Korean Kes-ita. ” In: Takubo, Yukinori (ed.) Japanese/Korean Linguistics 16. Stanford: CSLI, 279-288.
  59. Moriya, Testuharu, and Kaoru Horie. 2009. “What is and What is not Language-Specific about the Japanese Modal System? A Comparative and Historical Perspective.” In: Pizziconi, Barbara, and Mika Kizu (eds.), Japanese Modality: Exploring its Scope and Interpretations. New York: Pelgrave Macmillan, 87-114.
  60. Kim J, Koizumi M, Ikuta N, Fukumitsu Y, Kimura N, Iwata K, Watanabe J, Yokoyama S, Sato S, Horie K, and Kawashima R. 2009. “Scrambling Effects on the Processing of Japanese Sentences: An fMRI Study.” Journal of Neurolinguistics 22, 151-166.
  61. Ikuta N, Sugiura M, Inoue K, Sato S, Horie K, and Kawashima R. 2009. “Neural basis of sentence processing in which incoming words form a sentence.” Neuroreport 20, 531-535.
  62. Wakusawa K, Sugiura M, Sassa Y, Jeong H, Horie K, Sato S, Yokoyama H, Tsuchiya S, and Kawashima R. 2009. “Neural correlates of processing situational relationships between a part and the whole: An fMRI study.” Neuroimage 48, 486-496.
  63. Sugiura M, Wakusawa K, Sekiguchi A, Sassa Y, Jeong H, Horie K, Sato S, and Kawashima R. 2009. “Extraction of situational meaning by integrating multiple meanings in a complex environment: a functional MRI study.” Human Brain Mapping 30, 2678-2688.
  64. Morimoto, Satoshi, and Kaoru Horie. 2009. “Japanese Learners’ Construal of English Relative Clauses: A Processing Typological Account.” Selected Papers from the 2007 Annual Research Forum of the Linguistic Society of Hong Kong, 95-107.
  65. Tachibana K, Suzuki K, Mori E, Miura N, Kawashima R, Horie K, Sato S, Tanji J, and Mushiake H. 2009. “Neural Activity in the Human Brain Signals Logical Rule Identification.” Journal of Neurophysiology 102, 1526 -1537.
  66. Miura N, Sugiura M, Takahashi M, Sassa Y, Miyamoto A, Sato S, Horie K, Nakamura K, Kawashima R. 2010. “Effect of motion smoothness on brain activity while observing a dance: an fMRI study using a humanoid robot.” Social Neuroscience 5: 40-58.
  67. Yomogida Y, Sugiura M, Sassa Y, Wakusawa K, Sekiguchi A, Fukushima A, Takeuchi H, Horie K, Sato S, Kawashima R. 2010. “The Neural Basis of Agency: An fMRI study.” Neuroimage 50, 198-207.
  68. Jeong H, Sugiura M, Sassa Y, Wakusawa K, Horie K, Sato S, Kawashima R “Learning second language vocabulary: Neural dissociation of situation-based learning and text-based learning.” 2010. Neuroimage, 50, 802-809.
  69. Horie, Kaoru. In press, a. “Versatility of Nominalizations: Where Japanese and Korean Contrast.” Yap, Foong Ha et al. (eds.), Nominalization in Asian Languages. Diachronic and Typological Perspectives. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. http://www.cuhk.edu.hk/lin/nomz/
  70. Horie, Kaoru. In press, b. “Causative Constructions.” In: Hogan, Patrick C. (ed.), Cambridge Encyclopedia of the Language Sciences. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  71. Horie, Kaoru, and Heiko Narrog. “What Typology Reveals about Modality in Japanese: A Cross-linguistic Perspective In Tsuyoshi Ono and Kaori Kabata (eds.) Functional Approaches to Japanese Grammar. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
  72. Yokoyama O, Miura N, Watanabe J, Takemoto A, Uchida S, Sugiura M, Horie K, Sato S, Kawashima R, Nakamura K. In press. “Right frontopolar cortex activity correlates with reliability of retrospective rating of confidence in short-term recognition memory performance.” Neuroscience Research.

4. Invited Talks (citing invited talks in English only)

  1. Horie, Kaoru. “A Functional Continuum in the Nominal Domain: Genitive-Pronominal- Complementizer.” Linguistics Colloquium, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, March 1997.
  2. Horie, Kaoru. “Conversational Practices, Cultural Values and Use of Sentence-final Particles/ Suffixes in Japanese and Korean.” International Workshop on Cultural Concept and Language Use, Japan Woman's College, March 10, 1999.
  3. Horie, Kaoru. “Perception/cognition Verb Complements and Related Constructions: Typological, Cognitive-Functional, and Historical perspectives.” Sophia University, Tokyo, April 2, 1999.
  4. Horie, Kaoru. “Where Linguistic Typology, Cognitive Linguistics, and Language Contact Meet: Verbal Nouns in Japanese and Korean.” 17th Annual Meeting of the Linguistics Society of Sophia University, Tokyo, July 27, 2002
  5. Horie, Kaoru. “Typology, Grammar and Discourse: Where Japanese and Korean Differ.” Linguistics and Phonetics 2002, Meikai University (Chiba), September 4, 2002
  6. Horie, Kaoru. “Cognitive Foundations of Typological Form-meaning Mapping: Complementation Phenomena Revisited.” 4th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Cognitive Linguistic Association (JCLA), Invited symposium“Cognitive Typology, or what Cognitive Linguistics can contribute to Linguistic Typology and vice versa” (Organizer: Kaoru Horie), Meiji Gakuin U., Tokyo, September 15, 2003
  7. Prashant Pardeshi and Kaoru Horie. "Is Japanese a NARU language?" Workshop on “How to Learn Cognitive Linguistics” (Organzier: Toshio Ohori), Tokyo U., Komaba campus, May 1, 2004
  8. Horie, Kaoru, and Heiko Narrog. “Japanese Grammar Codes Best What Japanese Speakers Do Most: Mood and Modality in Japanese from Areal and Typological Perspectives”. To be presented at the International Symposium on Functional Approaches to Japanese Grammar, August 20-22, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada. August, 2004.
  9. Horie, Kaoru. “Linguistic Diversity and Second Language Acquisition: An Introduction to the Tohoku University 21st Century Center of Excellence Program (Humanities).” Invited colloquium, Cognitive Science Program, Seoul National University, Korea, March 28, 2005.
  10. Horie Kaoru, Prashant Pardeshi, and Guy Kaul. “Conceptual Continuity and Competing Motivations in the Marking of Subordinate Clauses: A Cognitive Typological Perspective.” Theme Session on Asymmetric Events at the 9th International Cognitive Linguistics Conference, Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea, 17-22 July, 2005.
  11. Horie, Kaoru. “Viewpoint, Passive, and Subjectivity: Where and How Japanese Differs from Korean and Other Asian Languages, and English.” 51th Annual Meeting of the English Literature Society of Japan, Hokkaido Branch, Hokkaido U., Sapporo, September 20, 2006
  12. Horie, Kaoru. “Typology, Language Use, and Brain: How Korean and Japanese Behave Differently and Similarly.” Invited Linguistics Colloquium, Department of Korean, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea, November 28, 2006.
  13. Horie, Kaoru. Invited presentation on relative clauses and noun-modifying constructions in East Asian languages. Relative Clause and Noun-modifying Clause Workshop. Stanford U. National University, Seoul, March, 2008.
  14. Horie, Kaoru. “Noun-modifying Constructions in Japanese and Korean: Main Clause Phenomena and the Oblique NP Accessibility Hierarchy.” Relative Clause and Noun-modifying Clause Workshop, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, USA, July 27, 2009
  15. Horie, Kaoru. “Horie, Kaoru. “Subjectivity and Intersubjectivity as an Ingredient of Grammatical Constructions: Passive and Causative Constructions in (some) Asian Languages.” Invited talk. Graduate Institute of Linguistics, National Taiwan U., Taipei, Republic of China, Nov 26, 2010
  16. Horie, Kaoru. “Noun-modifying Constructions in Japanese, Korean, and Mandarin Chinese: Functional Gradience and Pragmatic Interpretation.” Invited talk. Graduate Institute of Linguistics, National Taiwan U., Taipei, Republic of China, Nov 29, 2010
  17. Horie, Kaoru. TBA. Keynote speech (confirmed), International Cognitive Linguistics, X’ian, People’s Republic of China, July 2011

5. Oral/Poster Presentations (citing English presentations only)

  1. Horie, Kaoru. “Percept and Concept Revisited: Iconicity in Complementation". 1st International Cognitive Linguistic Conference, August 1991. UC Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, USA.
  2. Horie, Kaoru. “Koto, No and Kes". Workshop on Korean Syntax and Semantics, July 1991. UC Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, USA.
  3. Horie, Kaoru. “Where Japanese and Korean Disagree: Internally Headed Relatives.” 67th Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America (LSA), January 1993. Los Angeles, USA.
  4. Horie, Kaoru. “Markedness, Iconicity, and the Choice of Nominalization Strategy in Modern Japanese.” 3rd International Cognitive Linguistics Conference, July 1995, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, USA.
  5. Horie, Kaoru. “Viewpoint and the Grammaticalization of Complementizers in English and Japanese.” Workshop on Viewpoint in Cognitive Linguistics, 13th Annual Meeting of the English Linguistic Society of Japan, November 1995, Tokyo, Japan.
  6. Horie, Kaoru. “Iconicity and the Marking of Nominalized Clauses in Korean and Japanese.” 10th International Circle of Korean Linguistics. July 1996, Brisbane, Australia.
  7. Horie, Kaoru. “Functional Continuum "Genitive -Pronominal-Complementizer: Cross-linguistic Evidence from Cantonese, English, Japanese, Korean and Mandarin Chinese.” 2nd Association for Linguistic Typology, September 1997. University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, USA.
  8. Watanabe, Yasukado, Shigeru Sato, and Kaoru Horie. “Complementizer Selection in the Japanese Content Clause Construction: a Corpora-based Study.” 8th International Conference on Cognitive Processing of Asian Languages and Symposium on Brain, Cognition, and Communication, December 1997. Nagoya University, Nagoya.
  9. Horie, Kaoru. “Towards a Contrastive Semantic Typology of Japanese and Korean.” 4th Meeting of Transitivity and Ergativity/Accusativity in Syntactic Typology, February 1998. Institute of Asian and African Studies, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, Tokyo.
  10. Horie, Kaoru. “Cognitive Foundations of Cross-linguistically Variable Form-Meaning Mapping: A Case Study from Japanese and Korean.” 1st International Conference on Cognitive Typology, April 2000. University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium.
  11. Pardeshi, Prashant and Kaoru Horie. “An Intentional Visit to the Non-intentional Events: A Symbiosis of Linguistic Theory and Language Pedagogy”. 4th International Conference on Practical Linguistics of Japanese, April 3-4, 2004, San Francisco State University, USA.
  12. Prashant, Pardeshi, Kaoru Horie, Shigeru Sato. “Where Grammar and Socio-cultural Cognition Meet: A Case of Ego (Speaker) as a Goal”. International Workshop on Language, Brain and Science: Linguistic Science at Interdisciplinary Crossroads, June 11, 2004, Cambridge University, UK.
  13. Kaul, Guy, Kaoru Horie, and Prashant Pardeshi. “Subordination in Adioukrou: A Functional-Typological Analysis.” Project meeting on Studies on African languages (AFLANG), Tokyo U. of Foreign Studies, Tokyo, July 3, 2004
  14. Prashant Pardeshi, Kaoru Horie and Shigeru Sato. “An Anatomy of the Posture Verb 'Sit' in Marathi: A Cognitive-functional Account". The Conference on Conceptual Structure, Discourse, and Language (CSDL), October 8-10, 2004, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
  15. Guy Kaul, Kaoru Horie and Prashant Pardeshi. “Adverbial Clauses in Adioukrou: A Typology.” Presented at the meeting of the “Studies on African Languages (AFLANG.) Project”. The Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa (ILCAA), Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, Tokyo, July 2005
  16. Pardeshi Prashant, Qing-Mei Li, and Kaoru Horie. “What Does the Passive Reveal about a Language? A Parallel Text-Based Cognitive-Functional Inquiry.” The 9th International Cognitive Linguistics Conference, 17-22 July, 2005, Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea.
  17. Moriya, Tetsuharu, and Kaoru Horie. “The Development of Periphrastic Modal Expressions in Japanese and Korean: A Cognitive Perspective.” The 9th International Cognitive Linguistics Conference, 2005, Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea, July 2005
  18. Horie, Kaoru. “Modality and Discourse in Japanese and Korean: A Cognitive Typological Approach.” July 2005, The 9th International Pragmatics Association, Riva del Garda, Italy.
  19. Pardeshi Prashant, Qing-Mei Li, and Kaoru Horie. “Attention Flow vs. Viewpoint—A Parallel Corpus Based Inquiry into Competing Motivations in Discourse Organization.” The symposium “Interdisciplinary Themes in Cognitive Language Research.” November 25-26, 2005, University of Helsinki, Finland.
  20. Kaul Guy, Kaoru Horie and Prashant Pardeshi. “Complement Clauses in Adioukrou: A Typological Approach.” The meeting of the “Studies on African Languages (AFLANG.) Project”, Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa (ILCAA), December 10, 2005, Tokyo.
  21. Prashant, Pardeshi, Kaoru Horie et al. “Areal Distribution and Semantic Evolution of EAT expressions in the Languages of Asia.” The 28th Annual Meeting of the German Society of Linguistics (DGfS), February 2006, Bielfeld, Germany.
  22. Pardeshi, Prashant, Qing-Mei Li, and Kaoru Horie. “How to Organize Your Discourse: A Recipe for the Learners of Japanese.” The International Conference on Japanese Language Education, Columbia University, New York, USA, 5-6 August, 2006.
  23. Horie, Kaoru, and Joungmin Kim. “What Nominalization Does in Japanese and Korean Texts: Subjectivity vs. Intersubjectivity.” The 8th Conceptual Structure, Discourse, and Language, October 2006, UC, San Diego, USA
  24. Horie, Kaoru, and Joungmin Kim. “Textual Functions of Sentence Final Nominalization in Japanese and Korean.” The International Workshop on Nominalizers and Copulas in East Asian and Neighboring Languages. January 2007, Hong Kong.
  25. Horie, Kaoru, Joungmin Kim and Prashant Pardeshi. “Formulaic Sentence-final Nominalizations in Japanese, Korean, and Mandarin Chinese: Functional Unity and Divergences.” The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Linguistics Symposium on Formulaic Language, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA, 18-21 April, 2007.
  26. Morimoto, Satoshi, and Kaoru Horie. “Processing of English Relative Clauses by Japanese Learners.” 10th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society for Language Sciences (JSLS), Miyagi Woman’s University, Sendai, July 2007
  27. Horie, Kaoru. “Emancipatory Pragmatics and Grammaticalization Studies.” The 10th International Pragmatics Association, July 2007, Goteborg, Sweden.
  28. Horie, Kaoru. Workshop on Semantic-Pragmatic Changes in Grammar and Lexicon: Emergence of Concessivity, Politeness Effect, and Speaker’s Subjective Evaluation (Organizer: Horie, Kaoru, Discussant: Elizabeth C. Traugott), Annual Meeting of the 8the Japanese Cognitive Linguistic Association (JCLA), Seikei U., Tokyo, September 2007
  29. Horie, Kaoru, and Satomi Mori. “Lexical Borrowing from English into Korean and Japanese: Structural and non-structural Factors.” The18th International Congress of Linguists, July 2008, Seoul, Korea.
  30. Kim, Joungmin, and Kaoru Horie. The Emerging Sentence-Final ‘Attributive’ Quotative Construction in Korean Web-based Communication: A Contrastive Pragmatic Study with Japanese. New Reflections on Grammaticalization 4, July 2008, Leuven, Belgium.
  31. Horie, Kaoru. Workshop on Situating Self, Expressing Emotions and Quoting Thought: What Narrative and Face-to-Face Conversation Reveal about Cognition, Language, and Culture.” (Organizer: Horie, Kaoru, Discussants: Nick Enfield, Toshio Ohori), The 9the Japanese Cognitive Linguistic Association, September 2008, Tokyo.
  32. Prashant Pardeshi and Kaoru Horie. “From Anaphoric Adjective to De Dicto Complementizer: A Case Study from Marathi and Hindi.” The 9th conference on “Conceptual Structure, Discourse and Language (CSDL9)”, Oct 18-20, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
  33. Takako, Akiha, Kaoru Horie, and Yasuhiro Shirai. “Applying the Projection Model to the L2 Teaching of a Japanese Case Marker.” The 2nd International Conference on East Asian Linguistics, November 2008, Vancouver, Canada.
  34. Ryu, Juyeon, Kaoru Horie, and Yasuhiro Shirai. “The L2 Acquisition of Korean Aspect Markers -ko iss-and -a iss- by Japanese Learners.” The 2nd International Conference on East Asian Linguistics, November 2008, Vancouver, Canada. (Best paper award recipient)
  35. Ryu, Ju-Yeon, Kaoru Horie, and Yasuhiro Shirai. “How Do Japanese Learners Acquire the Korean Aspect Markers -ko iss- and -a iss-?” 12th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society for Language Sciences (JSLS), Tokyo Denki U., Hatoyama campus, July 2009
  36. Horie, Kaoru. “The Interactional Origin of Noun-Oriented Predicate Structure in Japanese: A Comparative Perspective.” The 11th International Pragmatics Association, July 2009, Melbourne, Australia
  37. Ryu, Ju-Yeon, Kaoru Horie, and Yasuhiro Shirai. “The Acquisition of Imperfective Aspect Marking in Korean as a Second Language by Japanese Learners.” PACLIC 24, November 7, 2010, Tohoku University

6.Doctoral dissertation (unpublished)

  1. A Cross-linguistic Study of Perception and Cognition Verb Complements: A Cognitive Perspective. (Department of Linguistics, University of Southern California, 1993) (243p.)