World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Social Sciences and Humanities

D-Index
46
Citations
11335
World Ranking
3551
National Ranking
1703

Overview

Peter C. Gordon is affiliated with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the United States. Their research spans several intersecting fields with a focus on cognitive and developmental aspects of psychology and neuroscience.

The scientist has contributed to the following main subfields of study:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Developmental and Educational Psychology
  • Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Infectious Diseases

Their work covers diverse topics, including:

  • Neurobiology of Language and Bilingualism
  • Language, Metaphor, and Cognition
  • Autism Spectrum Disorder Research
  • Categorization, Perception, and Language
  • Reading and Literacy Development
  • Food Security and Health in Diverse Populations
  • Machine Learning in Healthcare

Peter C. Gordon has co-authored frequently with several researchers, indicating collaborative work across various domains. Their frequent co-authors include:

  • Matthew W. Lowder
  • Wonil Choi
  • Tamara Y. Swaab
  • Renske S. Hoedemaker
  • Molly Losh

They have published numerous papers, with several appearing in known academic journals and venues. Frequent publication venues include:

  • UNC Libraries
  • Attention Perception & Psychophysics
  • Applied Clinical Informatics
  • mSphere
  • Scientific Reports

Some recent papers authored or co-authored by Peter C. Gordon are:

  • "Detecting Social and Behavioral Determinants of Health with Structured and Free-Text Clinical Data," 2020, Applied Clinical Informatics
  • "Oral and Gut Microbial Diversity and Immune Regulation in Patients with HIV on Antiretroviral Therapy," 2020, mSphere
  • "A cross-cultural study showing deficits in gaze-language coordination during rapid automatized naming among individuals with ASD," 2021, Scientific Reports
  • "Reading spaced and unspaced Korean text: Evidence from eye-tracking during reading," 2022, Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
  • "Rapid automatized naming (RAN): effects of aging on a predictor of reading skill," 2020, Aging Neuropsychology and Cognition

Best Publications

  • Pronouns, Names, and the Centering of Attention in Discourse

    Peter C. Gordon;Barbara J. Grosz;Laura A. Gilliom

  • Numerical Cognition Without Words: Evidence from Amazonia

    Unknown

  • Memory interference during language processing.

    Peter C. Gordon;Randall Hendrick;Marcus Johnson

  • Implicit Learning and Generalization of the "Mere Exposure" Effect

    Peter C. Gordon;Keith J. Holyoak

  • Memory-Load Interference in Syntactic Processing

    Peter C. Gordon;Randall Hendrick;William H. Levine;William H. Levine

  • Effects of noun phrase type on sentence complexity

    Peter C Gordon;Randall Hendrick;Marcus Johnson

  • Frequency Effects and the Representational Status of Regular Inflections

    Unknown

  • Pronouns in Marital Interaction What Do “You” and “I” Say About Marital Health?

    Rachel A. Simmons;Peter C. Gordon;Dianne L. Chambless

  • LEXICAL AND PRELEXICAL INFLUENCES ON WORD SEGMENTATION: EVIDENCE FROM PRIMING

    David W. Gow;Peter C. Gordon

  • Similarity-based interference during language comprehension: Evidence from eye tracking during reading.

    Peter C. Gordon;Randall Hendrick;Marcus Johnson;Yoonhyoung Lee

  • The representation and processing of coreference in discourse

    Peter C. Gordon;Randall Hendrick

  • Social reference points

    Keith J. Holyoak;Peter C. Gordon

  • Level-ordering in lexical development

    Unknown

  • The interplay of discourse congruence and lexical association during sentence processing: Evidence from ERPs and eye tracking.

    C. Christine Camblin;C. Christine Camblin;Peter C. Gordon;Tamara Y. Swaab

  • Intuitive knowledge of linguistic co-reference.

    Peter C Gordon;Randall Hendrick

  • Pronouns, Passives, and Discourse Coherence

    Peter C. Gordon;Davina Chan

  • Pronominalization and discourse coherence, discourse structure and pronoun interpretation

    Peter C. Gordon;Kimberly A. Scearce

  • Cognitive and linguistic factors affecting subject/object asymmetry: An eye-tracking study of prenominal relative clauses in Korean

    Nayoung Kwon;Peter C. Gordon;Yoonhyoung Lee;Robert Kluender

  • Speech production: Motor programming of phonetic features

    David Edward Meyer;Peter C. Gordon

  • Reading ability and print exposure: item response theory analysis of the author recognition test

    Mariah Moore;Peter C. Gordon

  • Evaluating the semantic categories hypothesis: The case of the count/mass distinction

    Unknown

  • Attentional Modulation of the Phonetic Significance of Acoustic Cues

    Peter C. Gordon;Jennifer L. Eberhardt;Jay G. Rueckl

  • Quantifying narrative ability in autism spectrum disorder: a computational linguistic analysis of narrative coherence.

    Molly Losh;Peter C. Gordon

  • Processing of Reference and the Structure of Language: An Analysis of Complex Noun Phrases

    Peter C. Gordon;Randall Hendrick;Kerry Ledoux;Chin Lung Yang

Frequent Co-Authors

Molly Losh
Molly Losh Northwestern University
David E. Meyer
David E. Meyer University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Keith J. Holyoak
Keith J. Holyoak University of California, Los Angeles
Ilan Yaniv
Ilan Yaniv Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Dianne L. Chambless
Dianne L. Chambless University of Pennsylvania
Maria Polinsky
Maria Polinsky University of Maryland, College Park

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