How Consonants and Vowels Shape Spoken-Language Recognition

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Abstract

All languages instantiate a consonant/vowel contrast. This contrast has processing consequences at different levels of spoken-language recognition throughout the lifespan. In adulthood, lexical processing is more strongly associated with consonant than with vowel processing; this has been demonstrated across 13 languages from seven language families and in a variety of auditory lexical-level tasks (deciding whether a spoken input is a word, spotting a real word embedded in a minimal context, reconstructing a word minimally altered into a pseudoword, learning new words or the ¤quot¤words¤quot¤ of a made-up language), as well as in written-word tasks involving phonological processing. In infancy, a consonant advantage in word learning and recognition is found to emerge during development in some languages, though possibly not in others, revealing that the stronger lexicon-consonant association found in adulthood is learned. Current research is evaluating the relative contribution of the early acquisition of the acoustic/phonetic and lexical properties of the native language in the emergence of this association.

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APA

Nazzi, T., & Cutler, A. (2019). How Consonants and Vowels Shape Spoken-Language Recognition. Annual Review of Linguistics. Annual Reviews Inc. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-linguistics-011718-011919

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