In:Above and Beyond the Segments: Experimental linguistics and phonetics
Edited by Johanneke Caspers, Yiya Chen, Willemijn Heeren, Jos Pacilly, Niels O. Schiller and Ellen van Zanten
[Not in series 189] 2014
► pp. 261–274
Phonetic accounts of timed responses in syllable monitoring experiments
Published online: 10 December 2014
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.189.21rie
https://doi.org/10.1075/z.189.21rie
This paper reports a syllable monitoring experiment that examines the role of
segmental phonetic information in Dutch. Participants were presented with
lists of spoken words and were required to detect auditorily specified targets
that matched or did not match the initial syllable of the spoken target-bearing
carrier word. The often-reported effect of syllabic match – the so-called syllable
match effect – was not observed in this experiment. Instead, our results revealed
that listeners make use of fine-grained acoustic information during syllable
monitoring: Reaction times to CVC-targets were found to be predictable by the
duration of the pre-consonantal vowel in case the extent of VC-coarticulation
was small (i.e. for stops).
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