Publications
Nikola, Novaković. 2022. “E is for Ernest who choked on a peach”: Food, death, and humourin the works of Edward Gorey. The European Journal of Humour Research 10 (3) : 22–38.
Chrzanowska-Kluczewska, Elzbieta. 2017. Humorous nonsense and multimodality in British and American children’s poetry. The European Journal of Humour Research 5 (3) : 25–42.
Hołobut, Agata. 2017. Vestibules to the “world of topsyturvydom” – peritexts in nonsense anthologies. The European Journal of Humour Research 5 (3) : 4–24.
Sundmark, Björn. 2017. Some uffish thoughts on the Swedish translations of “Jabberwocky”. The European Journal of Humour Research 5 (3) : 43–56.
Liang, Hsiao-chu and Shelley Ching-yu Hsieh. 2014. Humorous communication in social and political issues: A case study of a Celebrity Imitation Show. International Journal of Chinese Linguistics 1 (2) : 275–292.
Kawahara, Shigeto. 2012. Lyman's Law is active in loanwords and nonce words: Evidence from naturalness judgment studies. Lingua 122 (11) : 1193–1206.
Carlson, Kieth A. 2011. The impact of humor on memory: Is the humor effect about humor? Humor 24 (1) : 21–41.
Samson, Andrea C. and Christian F. Hempelmann. 2011. Humor with backgrounded incongruity: Does more required suspension of disbelief affect humor perception? Humor 24 (2) : 167–185.
Bauer, Samuel M. 2010. From jeering to giggling: Spain's dramatic break from a satirical to an avant-garde humor. Humor 23 (1) : 65–81.
Burani, Cristina, Laura Barca, Lisa S. Arduino and Giovanni Pagliuca. 2008. Fully transparent orthography, yet lexical reading aloud: The lexicality effect in Italian. Language and Cognitive Processes 23 (3) : 422–433.
Nett Cordero, Kelly, Jocelyne Kalanek, Kerry Danahy Ebert and Kathryn Kohnert. 2008. Spanish Nonword Repetition: Stimuli Development and Preliminary Results. Communication Disorders Quarterly 29 (2) : 67–74.
Wallihan, James. 2003. Reverse Bargaining: Some Oddities That Illustrate the “Rules”. Negotiation Journal 19 (3) : 207–214.
Dolitsky, Marlene. 1984. Under the tumtum tree: From nonsense to sense, a study in nonautomatic comprehension. John Benjamins.