This article addresses the questions of how and when lexical information influences phoneme identification in a series of phoneme-monitoring experiments in which conflicting predictions of autonomous and interactive models were evaluated. Strong facilitatory lexical effects (reflected by large differences in detection latencies to targets in words and matched nonwords) were found only when targets came after the uniqueness point of the target-bearing word. Furthermore, no evidence was obtained for lexically mediated inhibition on phoneme identification as predicted by the interactive activation model TRACE. These results taken together point to strong limitations in the way in which lexical information can affect the perception of unambiguo...
In this paper, we propose a new version of the phoneme monitoring task that is well-suited for the s...
Item does not contain fulltextLexical knowledge influences how human listeners make decisions about ...
In speech perception tasks with ambiguous bottom-up information, lexical processes have been shown t...
Under what conditions do lexical factors influence phoneme detection times? Experiment 1 measured su...
The effects of lexical context on phonological processing are pervasive and there have been indicati...
Although the psycholinguistic literature is rife with examples of lexical influences on phoneme ide...
Five phoneme monitoring experiments are reported that investigate the relationship between the degre...
Contains fulltext : 5949.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In seven experime...
In this experiment we investigated the role of the lexical status (word/non-word) of the target item...
A number of studies suggest that attention can modulate the extent to which lexical processing influ...
A monitoring bias account is often used to explain speech error patterns that seem to be the result ...
International audienceWe examined the contributions of phoneme-to-word facilitation and word-to-word...
International audienceWe examined the contributions of phoneme-to-word facilitation and word-to-word...
Auditory word recognition proceeds fluidly despite numerous perturbations and obstacles that exist i...
Two phoneme monitoring experiments are reported that examine the amount of lexical activation produc...
In this paper, we propose a new version of the phoneme monitoring task that is well-suited for the s...
Item does not contain fulltextLexical knowledge influences how human listeners make decisions about ...
In speech perception tasks with ambiguous bottom-up information, lexical processes have been shown t...
Under what conditions do lexical factors influence phoneme detection times? Experiment 1 measured su...
The effects of lexical context on phonological processing are pervasive and there have been indicati...
Although the psycholinguistic literature is rife with examples of lexical influences on phoneme ide...
Five phoneme monitoring experiments are reported that investigate the relationship between the degre...
Contains fulltext : 5949.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In seven experime...
In this experiment we investigated the role of the lexical status (word/non-word) of the target item...
A number of studies suggest that attention can modulate the extent to which lexical processing influ...
A monitoring bias account is often used to explain speech error patterns that seem to be the result ...
International audienceWe examined the contributions of phoneme-to-word facilitation and word-to-word...
International audienceWe examined the contributions of phoneme-to-word facilitation and word-to-word...
Auditory word recognition proceeds fluidly despite numerous perturbations and obstacles that exist i...
Two phoneme monitoring experiments are reported that examine the amount of lexical activation produc...
In this paper, we propose a new version of the phoneme monitoring task that is well-suited for the s...
Item does not contain fulltextLexical knowledge influences how human listeners make decisions about ...
In speech perception tasks with ambiguous bottom-up information, lexical processes have been shown t...