International audienceIn three experiments, we examined the effects of phonological resyllabification processes on the perception of French speech. Enchainment involves the resyllabification of a word-final consonant across a syllable boundary (e.g., in chaque avion, the /k/ crosses the syllable boundary to become syllable initial). Liaison involves a further process of realization of a latent consonant, alongside resyllabification (e.g., the /t/ in petit avion). If the syllable is a dominant unit of perception in French (Mehler, Dommergues, Frauenfelder, & Segui, 1981), these processes should cause problems for recognition of the following word. A cross-modal priming experiment showed no cost attached to either type of resyllabification in...
Lexical effects on speech perception are not very reliable and they have been shown to depend on var...
Three word-spotting experiments assessed the role of syllable onsets and offsets in lexical segmenta...
Three word-spotting experiments assessed the role of syllable onsets and offsets in lexical segmenta...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined the effects of phonological resyllabificatio...
In French, the final [(r)] of dernier is not pronounced in dernier train (last train), but is pronou...
International audienceIn this paper, we address the question of whether word boundaries can surface ...
Contains fulltext : 62672.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Spoken word reco...
In spoken French, the phonological processes of liaison and resyllabification can render word and sy...
A paraître dans APPLIED PSYCHOLINGUISTICSIn spoken French, the phonological processes of liaison and...
textIn spoken French, the phonological processes of liaison and resyllabification can render word a...
A study by Pitt and Samuel (1990) found that English speakers could narrowly focus attention onto a ...
This paper examines the production of perception of three types of phonological boundaries. In the f...
How do French listeners recognise words in liaison environments? This article presents a literature ...
The first part of the bachelor thesis describes the phenomenon of the resyllabification in French wh...
This paper investigates how the phonetic surface form of segments is influenced by their word and sy...
Lexical effects on speech perception are not very reliable and they have been shown to depend on var...
Three word-spotting experiments assessed the role of syllable onsets and offsets in lexical segmenta...
Three word-spotting experiments assessed the role of syllable onsets and offsets in lexical segmenta...
International audienceIn three experiments, we examined the effects of phonological resyllabificatio...
In French, the final [(r)] of dernier is not pronounced in dernier train (last train), but is pronou...
International audienceIn this paper, we address the question of whether word boundaries can surface ...
Contains fulltext : 62672.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Spoken word reco...
In spoken French, the phonological processes of liaison and resyllabification can render word and sy...
A paraître dans APPLIED PSYCHOLINGUISTICSIn spoken French, the phonological processes of liaison and...
textIn spoken French, the phonological processes of liaison and resyllabification can render word a...
A study by Pitt and Samuel (1990) found that English speakers could narrowly focus attention onto a ...
This paper examines the production of perception of three types of phonological boundaries. In the f...
How do French listeners recognise words in liaison environments? This article presents a literature ...
The first part of the bachelor thesis describes the phenomenon of the resyllabification in French wh...
This paper investigates how the phonetic surface form of segments is influenced by their word and sy...
Lexical effects on speech perception are not very reliable and they have been shown to depend on var...
Three word-spotting experiments assessed the role of syllable onsets and offsets in lexical segmenta...
Three word-spotting experiments assessed the role of syllable onsets and offsets in lexical segmenta...