Disentangling phonological well-formedness and attestedness
Author(s) -
James White,
Faith Chiu
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
acta linguistica academica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.295
H-Index - 10
eISSN - 2560-1016
pISSN - 2559-8201
DOI - 10.1556/2062.2017.64.4.2
Subject(s) - sonority hierarchy , phonotactics , phonology , consonant cluster , linguistics , psychology , phonological rule , phonological awareness , computer science , natural language processing , speech recognition , consonant , vowel , philosophy , reading (process)
Disentangling the roles of phonological well-formedness and lexical attestedness in phonotactic processing has proven challenging. In this study, we present results from a passive listening ERP study showing that English speakers exhibit distinct neural responses to CCVC nonce words according to the phonological well-formedness and attestedness (in English) of the onset cluster. Clusters with poor sonority sequencing evoked an N400 effect compared to those without poor sonority sequencing, regardless of whether the well-formed clusters were attested in English. In contrast, unattested clusters, regardless of whether they were well-formed or ill-formed in terms of sonority sequencing, evoked a late positivity compared to attested clusters. The results suggest that listeners first perform a phonological analysis on potential words before submitting them to a lexical search
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