When MOOD rhymes with ROAD. Dynamics of phonological coding in bilingual visual word perception
Publication year
2009Number of pages
33 p.
Source
The Mental Lexicon, 4, 3, (2009), pp. 303-335ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
SW OZ BSI OLO
Journal title
The Mental Lexicon
Volume
vol. 4
Issue
iss. 3
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 303
Page end
p. 335
Subject
Learning and PlasticityAbstract
Three experiments investigated whether perception of a spelling-to-sound inconsistent word such as MOOD involves coding of inappropriate phonology caused by knowledge of enemy neighbors (e.g., BLOOD) in non-native speakers. In a new bimodal matching task, Dutch-English bilinguals judged the correspondence between a printed English word and a speech segment that was or was not the printed word's rime. Evidence for coding of inappropriate phonology was obtained with trials in which the speech segment was derived from an English enemy neighbor. In such trials, error rates increased significantly relative to control trials. This effect was also found when speech segments were derived from Dutch enemy neighbors, which suggests inappropriate coding of cross-language phonology. These findings are consistent with a strong phonological theory of word perception (Frost, 1998), in which phonological coding is essentially a language non-selective process.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [246764]
- Electronic publications [134215]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30508]
- Open Access publications [107738]
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