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TY - GEN
ID - cogprints751
UR - http://cogprints.org/751/
A1 - Pallier, Christophe
Y1 - 1997///
N2 - A study by Pitt and Samuel (1990) found that English speakers could narrowly focus attention onto a precise phonemic position inside spoken words [1]. This led the authors to argue that the phoneme, rather than the syllable, is the primary unit of speech perception. Other evidence, obtained with a syllable detection paradigm, has been put forward to propose that the syllable is the unit of perception; yet, these experiments were ran with French speakers [2]. In the present study, we adapted Pitt & Samuel's phoneme detection experiment to French and found that French subjects behave exactly like English subjects: they too can focus attention on a precise phoneme. To explain both this result and the established sensitivity to the syllabic structure, we propose that the perceptual system automatically parses the speech signal into a syllabically-structured phonological representation.
PB - University of Patras, Rion, Greece
KW - Psycholinguisics
KW - unit of perception
KW - speech
KW - phoneme
KW - syllable
KW - attention
KW - detection
KW - reaction-times
KW - phonological structure
KW - segmentation
TI - Phonemes and Syllables in Speech Perception: size of the attentional focus in French.
SP - 2159
AV - public
EP - 2162
ER -