Sublexical and morphological information in speech processing

Zwitserlood P

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Three experiments investigated the impact of syllabic boundary information and of morphological structure on performance in a sequence-monitoring task. In sequence monitoring, participants detect pre-specified sequences of phonemes in spoken carrier words. Sequences corresponded to the first syllable of the carrier word, to its first morpheme, or simultaneously to both. The data from Experiments 1 and 2, using different variants of the monitoring task, showed a strong impact of syllable boundary cues on monitoring latencies. An effect of morphological match between targets and carrier words was also evident. Experiment 3, in which parts of the spoken carrier words were cross-spliced, revealed that syllabic boundary information takes precedence over morphological information. The results are in line with an early process of speech processing, in which syllabic cues are used to aid lexical access. The morphological effect is better understood as a later, probably lexical, contribution of morphological decomposition to monitoring performance. (C) 2003 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Details about the publication

JournalBrain and Language
Volume90
Issue1-3
Page range368-377
StatusPublished
Release year2004 (30/09/2004)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1016/S0093-934X(03)00448-6
Keywordssyllable syllable boundary cues speech segmentation morphemes morphological decomposition sequence monitoring spoken-word-recognition segmentation syllables english identification perception spanish french access

Authors from the University of Münster

Zwitserlood, Pienie
Professorship for Psycholinguistics and Cognitive Neuroscience (Prof. Zwitserlood)