UID:
edocfu_9958353514002883
Umfang:
1 online resource
ISBN:
9783050062273
Serie:
Studia grammatica ; BAND 69
Inhalt:
All humans are equipped with perceptual and articulatory mechanisms which (in healthy humans) allow them to learn to perceive and produce speech. One basic question in psycholinguistics is whether humans share similar underlying processing mechanisms for all languages, or whether these are fundamentally different due to the diversity of languages and speakers. This book provides a cross-linguistic examination of speech comprehension by investigating word recognition in users of different languages. The focus is on how listeners segment the quasi-continuous stream of sounds that they hear into a sequence of discrete words, and how a universal segmentation principle, the Possible Word Constraint, applies in the recognition of Slovak and German.
Anmerkung:
Front Matter --
,
1. Introduction --
,
2. Segmentation of Slovak speech --
,
3. Native and non-native segmentation --
,
4. The role of syllabification in speech segmentation --
,
5. Summary and conclusions --
,
Back Matter
,
In English.
Sprache:
Englisch
DOI:
10.1524/9783050062273
URL:
https://doi.org/10.1524/9783050062273