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 |