Does training on a phonemic contrast absent in the listener’s dialect influence word recognition?
Author(s) -
Sophie Dufour,
Noël Nguyen,
Ulrich Hans Frauenfelder
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
the journal of the acoustical society of america
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.619
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1520-8524
pISSN - 0001-4966
DOI - 10.1121/1.3431102
Subject(s) - contrast (vision) , session (web analytics) , word (group theory) , computer science , task (project management) , lexical decision task , linguistics , priming (agriculture) , speech recognition , psychology , artificial intelligence , cognition , philosophy , botany , germination , management , neuroscience , world wide web , economics , biology
Southern French listeners were trained on the word final Standard French /e/-/epsilon/ contrast that does not exist in their dialect. They learned to associate minimal pairs of new words with visual shapes. Although final training session performance was relatively high, the learning did not transfer to a lexical decision task with phonological priming. Thus successful training on a phonemic contrast did not guarantee the efficient use of this contrast in spoken word recognition tasks. These findings are discussed in light of abstractionist and exemplarist models.
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