Phonetic Psycholinguistics

1.IF SYLLABLES WERE CLASSIFICATION UNITS IN SPEECH PERCEPTION, AUDITORY PRIMING WOULD SHOW IT[details] [full paper]
Nicolas Dumay, Alain Content & Monique Radeau
2.THE EFFECT OF MISMATCHING SEGMENTAL INFORMATION ON THE MASKED ONSET PRIMING EFFECT (MOPE)[details] [full paper]
Niels Olaf Schiller & Sachiko Kinoshita
3.ACOUSTICS VS. PHONEMES IN LEXICAL ACCESS[details] [full paper]
William J. Barry & Bistra Andreeva
4.SUPERVISION HAMPERS DISTRIBUTIONAL LEARNING OF VOWEL CONTRASTS[details] [full paper]
Margarita Gulian, Paola Escudero & Paul Boersma
5.NO LEXICALLY-DRIVEN PERCEPTUAL ADJUSTMENTS OF THE [x]-[h] BOUNDARY[details] [full paper]
Michael A. Stevens, James M. McQueen & Robert J. Hartsuiker
6.LARYNGEAL FEATURE STRUCTURE IN 1ST AND 2ND LANGUAGE SPEECH PERCEPTION[details] [full paper]
Noah Silbert & Kenneth de Jong
7.SPEAKERS DIFFERENTIATE ENGLISH INTRUSIVE AND ONSET /r/, BUT L2 LISTENERS DO NOT[details] [full paper]
Annelie Tuinman, Holger Mitterer & Anne Cutler
8.WHY THE ‘PRESIDENT’ DOES NOT EXCITE THE ‘PRESS’: THE LIMITS OF SPURIOUS LEXICAL ACTIVATION IN L2 LISTENING[details] [full paper]
Mirjam Broersma
9.DUTCH LISTENERS' USE OF SUPRASEGMENTAL CUES TO ENGLISH STRESS[details] [full paper]
Anne Cutler, Roger Wales, Nicole Cooper & Joris Janssen
10.THE EFFECT OF TALKER FAMILIARITY ON WORD SEGMENTATION IN NOISE[details] [full paper]
Rachel Smith
11.THE LOCUS OF TALKER-SPECIFIC EFFECTS IN SPOKEN-WORD RECOGNITION[details] [full paper]
Alexandra Jesse, James M. McQueen & Mike Page
12.THE EFFECT OF AN UNFAMILIAR REGIONAL ACCENT ON SPOKEN WORD COMPREHENSION[details] [full paper]
Patti Adank & James M. McQueen
13.TRACKING PERCEPTION OF PRONUNCIATION VARIATION BY TRACKING LOOKS TO PRINTED WORDS: THE CASE OF WORD-FINAL /t/[details] [full paper]
Holger Mitterer & James M. McQueen
14.MORPHOLOGICAL ENCODING VIA PHONOLOGICAL FEATURES: FROM PHONETICS TO GRAMMAR[details] [full paper]
Mathias Scharinger, Aditi Lahiri & Henning Reetz
15.A PSYCHOACOUSTIC BASIS FOR DISSIMILATION: EVIDENCE FROM TANGKHUL NAGA[details] [full paper]
Ryan K. Shosted
16.THE MAPPING OF PHONETIC INFORMATION TO LEXICAL REPRESENTATIONS IN SPANISH: EVIDENCE FROM EYE MOVEMENTS[details] [full paper]
Andrea Weber, Alissa Melinger & Lourdes Lara Tapia
17.STRATEGIES FOR EDITING OUT SPEECH ERRORS IN INNER SPEECH[details] [full paper]
Sieb G. Nooteboom & Hugo Quené
18.INHIBITION OF PROCESSING DUE TO REDUCTION OF THE AMERICAN ENGLISH FLAP[details] [full paper]
Benjamin V. Tucker & Natasha Warner
19.INTERSEGMENTAL COHESION AND SYLLABLE DIVISION IN POLISH[details] [full paper]
Pier Marco Bertinetto, Sylwia Scheuer, Katarzyna Dziubalska-Kołaczyk & Maddalena Agonigi
20.CONFUSION PATTERNS AND RESPONSE BIAS IN SPOKENWORD RECOGNITION OF GERMAN DISYLLABIC WORDS AND NONWORDS[details] [full paper]
Robert Felty
21.IMPLICIT PHONETIC IMITATION IS CONSTRAINED BY PHONEMIC CONTRAST[details] [full paper]
Kuniko Nielsen