A study by Pitt and Samuel (1990) found that English speakers could narrowly focus attention onto a precise phonemic position inside spoken words [1]. This led the authors to argue that the phoneme, rather than the syllable, is the primary unit of speech perception. Other evidence, obtained with a syllable detection paradigm, has been put forward to propose that the syllable is the unit of perception; yet, these experiments were ran with French speakers [2]. In the present study, we adapted Pitt & Samuel's phoneme detection experiment to French and found that French subjects behave exactly like English subjects: they too can focus attention on a precise phoneme. To explain both this result and the established sensitivity to the syl...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined the effects of phonological resyllabificatio...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined the effects of phonological resyllabificatio...
This paper examines the question of cognitive status of syllable as a linguistic unit. The experimen...
A study by Pitt and Samuel (1990) found that English speakers could narrowly focus attention onto a ...
One highly influential finding that suggests that syllabic units are instrumental in speech percepti...
Experimental studies on English and French have already given numerous answers about how ambisyllabi...
Taft (1992) reported results supporting the idea that the "Body of the BOSS" (BOB) is an important u...
Speech segmentation procedures may differ in speakers of different languages. Earlier work based on ...
Speech segmentation procedures may differ in speakers of different languages. Earlier work based on ...
Speech segmentation procedures may differ in speakers of different languages. Earlier work based on ...
Speech segmentation procedures may differ in speakers of different languages. Earlier work based on ...
Item does not contain fulltextWhat is the syllable's role in speech processing? We suggest that the ...
Over the past fifty years numerous experimental researches have been published on the syllable. Obvi...
Two experiments are reported in which the processing units involved in the reading of French polysyl...
Speech segmentation procedures may differ in speakers of different languages. Earlier work based on ...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined the effects of phonological resyllabificatio...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined the effects of phonological resyllabificatio...
This paper examines the question of cognitive status of syllable as a linguistic unit. The experimen...
A study by Pitt and Samuel (1990) found that English speakers could narrowly focus attention onto a ...
One highly influential finding that suggests that syllabic units are instrumental in speech percepti...
Experimental studies on English and French have already given numerous answers about how ambisyllabi...
Taft (1992) reported results supporting the idea that the "Body of the BOSS" (BOB) is an important u...
Speech segmentation procedures may differ in speakers of different languages. Earlier work based on ...
Speech segmentation procedures may differ in speakers of different languages. Earlier work based on ...
Speech segmentation procedures may differ in speakers of different languages. Earlier work based on ...
Speech segmentation procedures may differ in speakers of different languages. Earlier work based on ...
Item does not contain fulltextWhat is the syllable's role in speech processing? We suggest that the ...
Over the past fifty years numerous experimental researches have been published on the syllable. Obvi...
Two experiments are reported in which the processing units involved in the reading of French polysyl...
Speech segmentation procedures may differ in speakers of different languages. Earlier work based on ...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined the effects of phonological resyllabificatio...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined the effects of phonological resyllabificatio...
This paper examines the question of cognitive status of syllable as a linguistic unit. The experimen...