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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Sonority as a Phonological Cue in Early Perception of Written Syllables in French
Méghane TossonianMéghane TossonianLudovic FerrandOphélie LucasMickaël BerthonNorbert Maïonchi-pinosubject
Frenchmedia_common.quotation_subjectWord processinglcsh:BF1-990visual word processingphonological universals050105 experimental psychologysonority03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMarkednessReading (process)PerceptionPsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencessyllableGeneral Psychologymedia_common05 social sciencesBrief Research ReportLinguisticsConjunction (grammar)illusory conjunctionsmarkednesslcsh:PsychologyPsychologie[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologySonority hierarchyIllusory conjunctionsSyllablePsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgerydescription
Many studies focused on the letter and sound co-occurrences to account for the well-documented syllable-based effects in French in visual (pseudo)word processing. Although these language-specific statistical properties are crucial, recent data suggest that studies that go all-in on phonological and orthographic regularities may be misguided in interpreting how—and why—readers locate syllable boundaries and segment clusters. Indeed, syllable-based effects could depend on more abstract, universal phonological constraints that rule and govern how letter and sound occur and co-occur, and readers could be sensitive to sonority—a universal phonological element—for processing (pseudo)words. Here, we investigate whether French adult skilled readers rely on universal phonological sonority-related markedness continuum across the syllable boundaries for segmentation (e.g. from marked, illegal intervocalic clusters /zl/ to unmarked, legal intervocalic clusters /lz/). To address this question, we ran two tasks with 128 French adult skilled readers using two versions of the illusory conjunction paradigm (Task 1 without white noise; Task 2 with white noise). Our results show that syllable location and segmentation in reading is early and automatically modulated by phonological sonority-related markedness in the absence or quasi-absence of statistical information and does not require acoustic-phonetic information. We discuss our results toward the overlooked role of phonological universals and the over-trusted role of statistical information during reading processes.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-10-15 | Frontiers in Psychology |