Affiliation:
1. University of Wisconsin
Abstract
Abstract
Two experiments investigated how people perceived and remembered fragments of spoken words that either
corresponded to correct lexical entries (as in the complex word drink-er) or did not (as in the simple word
glitt-er). Experiment 1 was a noise-rating task that probed perception.
Participants heard stimuli such
drinker, where strikethrough indicates noise overlaid at a
controlled signal-to-noise ratio, and rated the loudness of the noise. Results showed that participants rated noise on certain
pseudo-roots (e.g.,
glitter) as louder than noise on true roots
(
drinker), indicating that they perceived them with less clarity. Experiment 2 was an eye-fixation task that probed memory. Participants heard a word such as
drink-er while associating each fragment with a visual shape. At test, they saw the shapes again, and were
asked to look at the shape associated with a particular fragment, such as drink. Results showed that fixations to
shapes associated with pseudo-affixes (-er in glitter) were less accurate than fixations to
shapes associated with true affixes (-er in drinker), which suggests that they remembered the
pseudo-affixes more poorly. These findings provide evidence that the presence of correct lexical entries for roots and affixes
modulates people’s judgments about the speech that they hear.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Cognitive Neuroscience,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics