TY - JOUR
T1 - Sonority-related markedness drives the misperception of unattested onset clusters in French listeners
AU - Maïonchi-Pino, Norbert
AU - Taki, Yasuyuki
AU - Magnan, Annie
AU - Yokoyama, Satoru
AU - Écalle, Jean
AU - Takahashi, Kei
AU - Hashizume, Hiroshi
AU - Kawashima, Ryuta
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015, Editions NecPlus. All rights reserved.
PY - 2015/6/1
Y1 - 2015/6/1
N2 - Listeners often misperceive speech contexts that contain unattested, ill-formed phonological sequences and repair them to create well-formed or close-to-native sequences. However, what guides the misperception and repair processes still has to be studied in depth. In the present study, French adults and typically-developing children were presented aurally with monosyllabic pseudowords and their disyllabic /u/-inserted counterparts, with the well-formedness of the latters' onset clusters being manipulated (e.g., /bal/ vs. /gmal/). Here, we showed that onset clusters are increasingly misperceived as universal sonority-related markedness increases, i.e., from the most well-formed through to the most ill-formed onset clusters (e.g., /gm/ → /bd → /b/). A posteriori measurements confirmed that the misidentification is due to a phonological repair during which an illusory epenthetic /inverted e sign/-like vowel, i.e., a prototypical vowel inserted in French (e.g., /inverted e signb/), is inserted in order to restore an attested phonological CV syllable structure. But these patterns are not primarily affected by acoustic-phonetic cues or sonority-unrelated cues. Moreover, both sensitivity to universal sonority-related markedness and epenthetic repair were found to be available at an early age in children. These results strengthen the hypothesis that acoustic-phonetic cues and language-specific properties, such as statistical properties for example, are not solely responsible for speech perception.
AB - Listeners often misperceive speech contexts that contain unattested, ill-formed phonological sequences and repair them to create well-formed or close-to-native sequences. However, what guides the misperception and repair processes still has to be studied in depth. In the present study, French adults and typically-developing children were presented aurally with monosyllabic pseudowords and their disyllabic /u/-inserted counterparts, with the well-formedness of the latters' onset clusters being manipulated (e.g., /bal/ vs. /gmal/). Here, we showed that onset clusters are increasingly misperceived as universal sonority-related markedness increases, i.e., from the most well-formed through to the most ill-formed onset clusters (e.g., /gm/ → /bd → /b/). A posteriori measurements confirmed that the misidentification is due to a phonological repair during which an illusory epenthetic /inverted e sign/-like vowel, i.e., a prototypical vowel inserted in French (e.g., /inverted e signb/), is inserted in order to restore an attested phonological CV syllable structure. But these patterns are not primarily affected by acoustic-phonetic cues or sonority-unrelated cues. Moreover, both sensitivity to universal sonority-related markedness and epenthetic repair were found to be available at an early age in children. These results strengthen the hypothesis that acoustic-phonetic cues and language-specific properties, such as statistical properties for example, are not solely responsible for speech perception.
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U2 - 10.4074/S0003503314000086
DO - 10.4074/S0003503314000086
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84932615695
SN - 0003-5033
VL - 115
SP - 197
EP - 222
JO - Annee Psychologique
JF - Annee Psychologique
IS - 2
ER -