Two experiments examined children's syllabification of words and pseudowords with single intervocalic consonants. The first study used a pause insertion technique while the second study used a partial repetition task. In the pause insertion task, effects of consonant class, orthography and lexical status of the first syllable were observed only for nine- and twelve-year-old children. In the partial repetition task, fiveyear-olds showed sensitivity to these three factors, but only for first-part repetition. We discuss the similarity between the present findings and adult data and their implications for psycholinguistic theories of syllabification and lexical access
Studying the liaison in French and childish mistakes it entails (un nami, un zami) offers a unique p...
It has been argued that speakers would be able to use their knowledge about phonotactic or syllabic ...
International audienceThere is agreement that French typically reading children use syllable‐sized u...
Two experiments examined children's syllabification of words and pseudowords with single intervocali...
The influence of development and literacy upon syllabification in French was evaluated by comparing ...
Early word segmentation in French is complicated by three phenomena of re-syllabification: liaison (...
Pendant l'acquisition, l’enfant francophone reçoit comme input une langue orale où les frontières en...
To determine the syllabification rules applied by listeners when presented with different types of i...
The aim of this thesis was to understand the role of the syllable in the building of the first ortho...
Since words are rarely produced in isolation, one of the first steps in acquiring new words is to se...
Speech segmentation procedures may differ in speakers of different languages. Earlier work based on ...
Early segmentation of fluent speech into words: Cross-linguistic evaluation of the rhythmic bootstra...
Oral and inner behaviour in syllabes decoding at the begining of learning to read - Purpose : The y...
One challenge for theories of word recognition is to determine how the listener recovers the intend...
Les mots étant rarement produits hors contexte phrastique, les enfants vont devoir les extraire du f...
Studying the liaison in French and childish mistakes it entails (un nami, un zami) offers a unique p...
It has been argued that speakers would be able to use their knowledge about phonotactic or syllabic ...
International audienceThere is agreement that French typically reading children use syllable‐sized u...
Two experiments examined children's syllabification of words and pseudowords with single intervocali...
The influence of development and literacy upon syllabification in French was evaluated by comparing ...
Early word segmentation in French is complicated by three phenomena of re-syllabification: liaison (...
Pendant l'acquisition, l’enfant francophone reçoit comme input une langue orale où les frontières en...
To determine the syllabification rules applied by listeners when presented with different types of i...
The aim of this thesis was to understand the role of the syllable in the building of the first ortho...
Since words are rarely produced in isolation, one of the first steps in acquiring new words is to se...
Speech segmentation procedures may differ in speakers of different languages. Earlier work based on ...
Early segmentation of fluent speech into words: Cross-linguistic evaluation of the rhythmic bootstra...
Oral and inner behaviour in syllabes decoding at the begining of learning to read - Purpose : The y...
One challenge for theories of word recognition is to determine how the listener recovers the intend...
Les mots étant rarement produits hors contexte phrastique, les enfants vont devoir les extraire du f...
Studying the liaison in French and childish mistakes it entails (un nami, un zami) offers a unique p...
It has been argued that speakers would be able to use their knowledge about phonotactic or syllabic ...
International audienceThere is agreement that French typically reading children use syllable‐sized u...