title: Word recognition: do we need phonological representations? creator: Pallier, Christophe subject: Cognitive Psychology subject: Psycholinguistics description: Under what format(s) are spoken words memorized by the brain? Are word forms stored as abstract phonological representations? Or rather, are they stored as detailed acoustic-phonetic representations? (For example as a set of acoustic exemplars associated with each word). We present a series of experiments whose results point to the existence of prelexical phonological processes in word recognition and suggest that spoken words are accessed using a phonological code. contributor: Cutler, Anne contributor: McQueen, James contributor: Zondervan, Rian date: 2000 type: Conference Paper type: NonPeerReviewed format: application/pdf identifier: http://cogprints.org/929/3/swap1.pdf identifier: Pallier, Christophe (2000) Word recognition: do we need phonological representations? [Conference Paper] relation: http://cogprints.org/929/