Publication year
2003Source
Bilingualism. Language and Cognition, 6, 2, (2003), pp. 81-96ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
SW OZ DCC PL
SW OZ DCC CO
Former Organization
Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre
SW OZ NICI CO
Journal title
Bilingualism. Language and Cognition
Volume
vol. 6
Issue
iss. 2
Page start
p. 81
Page end
p. 96
Subject
PsycholinguisticsAbstract
Listeners efficiently exploit sentence prosody to direct attention to words bearing sentence accent. This effect has been explained as a search for focus, furthering rapid apprehension of semantic structure. A first experiment supported this explanation: English listeners detected phoneme targets in sentences more rapidly when the target-bearing words were in accented position or in focussed position, but the two effects interacted, consistent with the claim that the effects serve a common cause. In a second experiment a similar asymmetry was observed with Dutch listeners and Dutch sentences. In a third and a fourth experiment, proficient Dutch users of English heard English sentences; here, however, the two effects did not interact. The results suggest that less efficient mapping of prosody to semantics may be one way in which nonnative listening fails to equal native listening.
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- Faculty of Social Sciences [30036]
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