@inproceedings{65f746829a6141f78cf26420d3aeb3e5,
title = "Perceptual retuning or perceptual bias? Investigating lexically guided learning across a phoneme boundary",
abstract = "![CDATA[Lexically guided perceptual learning studies have shown that speakers use their knowledge of phonemes in words to retune existing phonemic categories in response to different pronunciations. In a previous study, the authors tested whether lexically guided retuning could occur across a native category boundary, that is, when words were pronounced with an incorrect native phoneme. Monolingual Australian-English listeners completed a training phase followed by a visual lexical decision task with cross-modal priming. For participants who were trained to perceive /θ/ as /f/, /θ/-bearing auditory stimuli subsequently primed visual f-targets but not s-targets, consistent with training, but those in the /θ/=/s/ training group also showed a tendency for priming in the same direction. Here we tested whether priming would occur for the same cross-modal priming task in the absence of training. Results demonstrated a similar priming effect to that of the previous study, suggesting that the priming effects were due to a pre-existing bias to perceive /θ/ as /f/. Taken together, the two studies suggest that lexically guided retuning may not be possible across a native phoneme boundary.]]",
keywords = "speech perception, pronunciation, priming (psychology), word recognition",
author = "Faris, {Mona M.} and Tyler, {Michael D.}",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
publisher = "Causal Productions",
pages = "169--172",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 14th Australasian International Conference on Speech Science and Technology : 3-6 December 2012, Macquarie University, Sydney, N.S.W.",
note = "Australasian International Conference on Speech Science and Technology ; Conference date: 03-12-2012",
}