Experiments have revealed differences across languages in listeners’ use of stress information in recognising spoken words. Previous comparisons of the vocabulary of Spanish and English had suggested that the explanation of this asymmetry might lie in the extent to which considering stress in spokenword recognition allows rejection of unwanted competition from words embedded in other words. This hypothesis was tested on the vocabularies of Dutch and German, for which word recognition results resemble those from Spanish more than those from English. The vocabulary statistics likewise revealed that in each language, the reduction of embeddings resulting from taking stress into account is more similar to the reduction achieved in Spanish than ...
Background/Aims: Evidence from spoken word recognition suggests that for English listeners, distingu...
In spite of our illusions to the contrary, there are few acoustic cues to word boundaries in spoken ...
A preliminary experiment studying the perception of lexical stress in isolated Italian words by Span...
Experiments have revealed differences across languages in listeners’ use of stress information in re...
Lexical stress is realised similarly in English, German, and Dutch. On a suprasegmental level, stres...
This study investigated whether English speakers retained the lexical stress patterns of newly learn...
Dutch listeners were slower to make judgements about the semantic relatedness between a spoken targe...
Four cross-modal priming experiments and two forced-choice identification experiments investigated t...
Four cross-modal priming experiments and two forced-choice identification experiments investigated t...
In lexical stress languages, phonemically identical syllables can differ suprasegmentally (in durati...
Dutch and Spanish differ in how predictable the stress pattern is as a function of the segmental con...
Four cross-modal priming experiments and two forced-choice identification experiments investigated t...
It is well-established that listeners use lexical stress cues to recognize words when listening to t...
Lexical stress is critical in word recognition and speech segmentation in first language (L1). The e...
In languages with variable stress placement, lexical stress patterns can convey information about wo...
Background/Aims: Evidence from spoken word recognition suggests that for English listeners, distingu...
In spite of our illusions to the contrary, there are few acoustic cues to word boundaries in spoken ...
A preliminary experiment studying the perception of lexical stress in isolated Italian words by Span...
Experiments have revealed differences across languages in listeners’ use of stress information in re...
Lexical stress is realised similarly in English, German, and Dutch. On a suprasegmental level, stres...
This study investigated whether English speakers retained the lexical stress patterns of newly learn...
Dutch listeners were slower to make judgements about the semantic relatedness between a spoken targe...
Four cross-modal priming experiments and two forced-choice identification experiments investigated t...
Four cross-modal priming experiments and two forced-choice identification experiments investigated t...
In lexical stress languages, phonemically identical syllables can differ suprasegmentally (in durati...
Dutch and Spanish differ in how predictable the stress pattern is as a function of the segmental con...
Four cross-modal priming experiments and two forced-choice identification experiments investigated t...
It is well-established that listeners use lexical stress cues to recognize words when listening to t...
Lexical stress is critical in word recognition and speech segmentation in first language (L1). The e...
In languages with variable stress placement, lexical stress patterns can convey information about wo...
Background/Aims: Evidence from spoken word recognition suggests that for English listeners, distingu...
In spite of our illusions to the contrary, there are few acoustic cues to word boundaries in spoken ...
A preliminary experiment studying the perception of lexical stress in isolated Italian words by Span...