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Spoken Word Access Processes (SWAP): A Special Issue of Language and Cognitive Processes [Pehme köide]

Edited by (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, The Netherlands), Edited by
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Spoken word access processes are the mental processes which underlie our ability to recognise spoken words. They are the perceptual processes which take the sequence of buzzes, bursts and chirps that make up the raw speech signal and convert them into a sequence of words. This edited volume contains articles and short reports which examine these processes. These papers are based on presentations at the workshop Spoken Word Access Processes (SWAP), held in Nijmegen in May 2000. They cover the major issues that the field is now concerned with, and thus provide a snapshot of the current state of the SWAP art. Core representational issues about spoken words are addressed: the form of the representations which are used to access the mental lexicon; how phonological information is coded in the lexicon; and how morphological and semantic information about each word is stored. The main components of the lexical access process are also discussed: competition between candidate words; computation of goodness-of-fit between the signal and stored lexical knowledge; segmentation of continuous speech into words; whether there is feedback from the lexicon to earlier stages of processing; and the relationship of form-based processes to the processes responsible for deriving interpretations of utterances. This collection should be essential reading for those working in this or related areas of psycholinguistics. An introductory article is included which makes this research more accessible to students in cognitive psychology and phonetics, and to specialists in other fields of psychology and linguistics.

This edited volume contains articles and short reports which examine Spoken Word Access Processes, the mental processes which underlie our ability to recognise spoken words.
Preface 465(4)
James M. McQueen
Anne Cutler
Spoken word access processes: An introduction
469(22)
James M. McQueen
Anne Cutler
New evidence for prelexical phonological processing in word recognition
491(16)
Emmanuel Dupoux
Christophe Pallier
Kazuhiko Kakehi
Jacques Mehler
Subcategorical mismatches and the time course of lexical access: Evidence for lexical competition
507(28)
Delphine Dahan
James S. Magnuson
Michael K. Tanenhaus
Ellen M. Hogan
Variation and assimilation in German: Consequences for lexical access and representation
535(30)
Else Coenen
Pienie Zwitserlood
Jens Bolte
Phonotactics, density, and entropy in spoken word recognition
565(18)
Paul A. Luce
Nathan R. Large
Bottom-up inhibition in lexical selection: Phonological mismatch effects in spoken word recognition
583(26)
Uli H. Frauenfelder
Mark Scholten
Alain Content
Sequence detection in pseudowords in French: Where is the syllable effect?
609(28)
Alain Content
Christine Meunier
Ruth Kearns
Uli Frauenfelder
Language-universal constraints on speech segmentation
637(24)
Dennis Norris
James M. McQueen
Anne Cutler
Sally Butterfield
Ruth Kearns
Lipreading and the compensation for coarticulation mechanism
661(12)
Jean Vroomen
Beatrice de Gelder
Short reports
Phoneme-like units and speech perception
673(8)
Terrance M. Nearey
Mapping from acoustic signal to phonetic category: Internal category structure, context effects and speeded categorization
681(10)
Joanne L. Miller
Why phonological constraints are so coarse-grained
691(8)
Janet Pierrehumbert
Access to lexical representations: Cross-linguistic issues
699(10)
William D. Marslen-Wilson
Some empirical tests of Merge's architecture
709(6)
Arthur G. Samuel
The source of a lexical bias in the Verbal Transformation Effect
715(8)
Mark A. Pitt
Lisa Shoaf
Phonological variation and its consequences for the word recognition system
723(8)
M. Gareth Gaskell
Taking the hit: Leaving some lexical competition to be resolved post-lexically
731(7)
Ellen Gurman Bard
Catherine Sotillo
M. Louise Kelly
Matthew P. Aylett
Subject Index 738
Anne Cutler, James MCQUEEN