textIn spoken French, the phonological processes of liaison and resyllabification can render word and syllable boundaries ambiguous. In the case of liaison, for example, the /n/ in the masculine indefinite article un [oẽ] is normally latent, but when followed by a vowel-initial word the /n/ surfaces and is resyllabified as the onset of that word. Thus, the phrases un air ‘a melody’ and un nerf ‘a nerve’ are produced with identical phonemic content and syllable boundaries [oẽ.nɛʁ]). Some research has suggested that speakers of French give listeners cues to word boundaries by varying the duration of consonants that surface in liaison environments relative to consonants produced word-initially. Production studies (e.g. Wauquier-Grave...
This artificial language learning (ALL) study investigates how multiple sublexical cues contribute s...
This artificial language learning (ALL) study investigates how multiple sublexical cues contribute s...
This research examined acoustic-phonetic cues to word boundary location in French consonant clusters...
textIn spoken French, the phonological processes of liaison and resyllabification can render word a...
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...
French is a language that poses particular difficulties for the second language (L2) learner in the ...
The online segmentation of the continuous speech stream requires that the listener employ strategies...
This paper examines the production of perception of three types of phonological boundaries. In the f...
In this study, we consider how native status and signal degradation influence French listeners’ segm...
This is the published version, also available here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/lp-2012-0018.This stud...
Contains fulltext : 62672.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Spoken word reco...
International audienceA growing number of studies have shown that prosodic boundaries are obvious ca...
International audienceWord segmentation is one of the initial processes that needs to be solved when...
International audienceWe investigated the use of language-specific intonational cues to word segment...
This artificial language learning (ALL) study investigates how multiple sublexical cues contribute s...
This artificial language learning (ALL) study investigates how multiple sublexical cues contribute s...
This research examined acoustic-phonetic cues to word boundary location in French consonant clusters...
textIn spoken French, the phonological processes of liaison and resyllabification can render word a...
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...
French is a language that poses particular difficulties for the second language (L2) learner in the ...
The online segmentation of the continuous speech stream requires that the listener employ strategies...
This paper examines the production of perception of three types of phonological boundaries. In the f...
In this study, we consider how native status and signal degradation influence French listeners’ segm...
This is the published version, also available here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/lp-2012-0018.This stud...
Contains fulltext : 62672.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Spoken word reco...
International audienceA growing number of studies have shown that prosodic boundaries are obvious ca...
International audienceWord segmentation is one of the initial processes that needs to be solved when...
International audienceWe investigated the use of language-specific intonational cues to word segment...
This artificial language learning (ALL) study investigates how multiple sublexical cues contribute s...
This artificial language learning (ALL) study investigates how multiple sublexical cues contribute s...
This research examined acoustic-phonetic cues to word boundary location in French consonant clusters...