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Processing of illegal consonant clusters: A case of perceptual assimilation?
Author(s) -
Pierre Hallé,
Juan Seguí,
Uli H. Frauenfelder,
Christine Meunier
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of experimental psychology human perception and performance
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.691
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1939-1277
pISSN - 0096-1523
DOI - 10.1037/0096-1523.24.2.592
Subject(s) - consonant , perception , speech recognition , consonant cluster , stop consonant , phonetics , assimilation (phonology) , computer science , word (group theory) , line (geometry) , psychology , linguistics , mathematics , vowel , geometry , neuroscience , philosophy
Evidence is presented for a perceptual shift affecting consonant clusters that are phonotacti- cally illegal, albeit pronounceable, in French. They are perceived as phonetically close legal clusters. Specifically, word-initial /dl/ and /tl/ are heard as /gl/ and /kl/, respectively. In 2 phonemic gating experiments, participants generally judged short gates—which did not yet contain information about the 2nd consonant tl—as being dental stops. However, as information for the /!/ became available in larger gates, a perceptual shift developed in which the initial stops were increasingly judged to be velars. A final phoneme monitoring test suggested that this kind of shift took place on-line during speech processing and with some extratemporal processing cost. These results provide evidence for the automatic integration of low-level phonetic information into a more abstract code determined by the native phonological system

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