Publication year
2005Source
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A: Human Experimental Psychology, 58, 2, (2005), pp. 251-274ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
SW OZ DCC CO
Former Organization
SW OZ NICI CO
Journal title
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A: Human Experimental Psychology
Volume
vol. 58
Issue
iss. 2
Page start
p. 251
Page end
p. 274
Subject
PsycholinguisticsAbstract
Three cross-modal priming experiments examined the role of suprasegmental information in the processing of spoken words. All primes consisted of truncated spoken Dutch words. Recognition of visually presented word targets was facilitated by prior auditory presentation of the same words' first two syllables as primes, but only if they were appropriately stressed (e.g. OKTOBER preceded by okTO-); inappropriate stress, compatible with another word (e.g. OKTOBER preceded by OCto-, the beginning of octopus), produced inhibition. Monosyllabic fragments (e.g. OC-) also produced facilitation when appropriately stressed; if inappropriately stressed, they produced neither facilitation nor inhibition. The bisyllabic fragments which were compatible with only one word produced facilitation to semantically associated words, but inappropriate stress caused no inhibition of associates. The results are explained within a model of spoken-word recognition involving competition between simultaneously activated phonological representations followed by activation of separate conceptual representations for strongly supported lexical candidates; at the level of the phonological representations, activation is modulated by both segmental and suprasegmental information.
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