par Vroomen, Jean;De Gelder, Béatrice
Référence Memory & cognition, 27, 3, page (413-421)
Publication Publié, 1999-05
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : Resyllabification is a phonological process in which consonants are attached to syllables other than those from which they originally came. In four experiments, we investigated whether resyllabified words, such as 'my bike is' pronounced as 'mai.bai.kis,' are more difficult to recognize than nonresyllabified words. Using a phoneme-monitoring task, we found that phonemes in resyllabified words were detected more slowly than those in nonresyllabified words. This difference increased when recognition of the carrier word was made more difficult. Acoustic differences between the target words themselves could not account for the results, because cross-splicing the resyllabified and nonresyllabified carrier words did not change the pattern. However, when nonwords were used as carriers, the effect disappeared. It is concluded that resyllabification increases the lexical- processing demands, which then interfere with phoneme monitoring.