Publication year
2001Source
Language and Cognitive Processes, 16, 5/6, (2001), pp. 469-490ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
SW OZ DCC CO
Journal title
Language and Cognitive Processes
Volume
vol. 16
Issue
iss. 5/6
Page start
p. 469
Page end
p. 490
Subject
PsycholinguisticsAbstract
We introduce the papers in this special issue by summarizing the current major issues in spoken word recognition. We argue that a full understanding of the process of lexical access during speech comprehension will depend on resolving several key representational issues: what is the form of the representations used for lexical access; how is phonological information coded in the mental lexicon; and how is the morphological and semantic information about each word stored? We then discuss a number of distinct access processes: competition between lexical hypotheses; the computation of goodness-of-fit between the signal and stored lexical knowledge; segmentation of continuous speech; whether the lexicon influences prelexical processing through feedback; and the relationship of form-based processing to the processes responsible for deriving an interpretation of a complete utterance. We conclude that further progress may well be made by swapping ideas among the different sub-domains of the discipline.
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