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Phonological variation in lexical access: Abstractness, inference and english place assimilation

Language and Cognitive Processes, 1995
Abstract Phonological variation in the phonetic form of words is a challenge to theories of lexical access and speech perception. This paper reviews some recent research on English place assimilation (e.g. sweet articulated as sweep in the environment sweet boy), evaluating an account of variation in terms of abstract, underspecified lexical form ...
Gareth Gaskell   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

General phonological rules and phonetic processes: Russian palatalization assimilation

Canadian Journal of Linguistics/Revue canadienne de linguistique, 1977
The kinds of rules found in the phonological components of generative grammars have been traditionally grouped into three types: (1) LEXICAL REDUNDANCY or MORPHEME STRUCTURE rules, which fill in redundant features of systematic phonemes within morphemes; (2) PHONOLOGICAL rules, which operate both within morphemes as well as across morpheme boundaries ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Adult perception of nonnative contrasts differing in assimilation to native phonological categories

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1990
In cross-language speech research, adults often have difficulty discriminating non-native phoneme contrasts, although this difficulty is not universal nor is it necessarily permanent. Best et al. [J. Exp. Psychol.: Human Percept. Perf. 14, 345–360 (1988)] recently proposed that phonologically mature listeners assimilate nonnative contrasts to native ...
openaire   +2 more sources

The recognition of phonologically assimilated words does not depend on specific language

Cognitive Science, 2006
In a series of 5 experiments, we investigated whether the processing of phonologically assimilated utterances is influenced by language learning. Previous experiments had shown that phonological assimilations, such as /lean#bacon/ -> [leam bacon], are compensated for in perception.
Mitterer, H.   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Irreducible parallelism in phonology

, 2020
Jeffrey Adler, Jesse Zymet
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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