Syllable retrieval precedes sub-syllabic encoding in Cantonese spoken word production.

Two experiments were conducted to investigate the time course of syllabic and sub-syllabic processing in Cantonese spoken word production by using the picture-word interference task. Cantonese-speaking participants were asked to name individually presented pictures aloud and ignore an auditory word...

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Main Authors: Andus Wing-Kuen Wong, Jie Wang, Siu-San Wong, Hsuan-Chih Chen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6245687?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-5bb11bfa74ee4c549a39ae06cd926b512020-11-25T02:45:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011311e020761710.1371/journal.pone.0207617Syllable retrieval precedes sub-syllabic encoding in Cantonese spoken word production.Andus Wing-Kuen WongJie WangSiu-San WongHsuan-Chih ChenTwo experiments were conducted to investigate the time course of syllabic and sub-syllabic processing in Cantonese spoken word production by using the picture-word interference task. Cantonese-speaking participants were asked to name individually presented pictures aloud and ignore an auditory word distractor. The targets and distractors were either phonologically related (i.e., sharing two identical word-initial phonemes) or unrelated. In Experiment 1, the target syllables were all consonant-vowel (CV)-structured. The phonological distractor was either a CV syllable (i.e., Full Syllable Overlap) or a CVC (consonant-vowel-consonant) syllable (i.e., Sub-syllable Overlap). Relative to the unrelated control, Full Syllable Overlap distractors facilitated naming in all stimuli onset asynchronies (SOAs) (-175, 0, or +175 ms) whereas Sub-syllable Overlap distractors exhibited facilitation only at 0-ms and +175-ms SOAs. Experiment 2 adopted a similar design to examine the possible influence of syllabic structure similarity on the results of Experiment 1. The target syllables were all CVC-structured. The phonological distractor was either a CVC (i.e., Syllable-structure Consistent) or CV (i.e., Syllable-structure Inconsistent) syllable. Comparable priming was observed between the two distractor conditions across the three SOAs. These results indicated that an earlier priming effect was observed with full syllable overlap than sub-syllabic overlap when the degree of segmental overlap was held constant (Experiment 1). The earlier syllable priming observed in Experiment 1 could not be attributed to the effect of syllabic-structure (Experiment 2), thereby suggesting that the syllable unit is important in Cantonese and is retrieved earlier than sub-syllabic components during phonological encoding.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6245687?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andus Wing-Kuen Wong
Jie Wang
Siu-San Wong
Hsuan-Chih Chen
spellingShingle Andus Wing-Kuen Wong
Jie Wang
Siu-San Wong
Hsuan-Chih Chen
Syllable retrieval precedes sub-syllabic encoding in Cantonese spoken word production.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Andus Wing-Kuen Wong
Jie Wang
Siu-San Wong
Hsuan-Chih Chen
author_sort Andus Wing-Kuen Wong
title Syllable retrieval precedes sub-syllabic encoding in Cantonese spoken word production.
title_short Syllable retrieval precedes sub-syllabic encoding in Cantonese spoken word production.
title_full Syllable retrieval precedes sub-syllabic encoding in Cantonese spoken word production.
title_fullStr Syllable retrieval precedes sub-syllabic encoding in Cantonese spoken word production.
title_full_unstemmed Syllable retrieval precedes sub-syllabic encoding in Cantonese spoken word production.
title_sort syllable retrieval precedes sub-syllabic encoding in cantonese spoken word production.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Two experiments were conducted to investigate the time course of syllabic and sub-syllabic processing in Cantonese spoken word production by using the picture-word interference task. Cantonese-speaking participants were asked to name individually presented pictures aloud and ignore an auditory word distractor. The targets and distractors were either phonologically related (i.e., sharing two identical word-initial phonemes) or unrelated. In Experiment 1, the target syllables were all consonant-vowel (CV)-structured. The phonological distractor was either a CV syllable (i.e., Full Syllable Overlap) or a CVC (consonant-vowel-consonant) syllable (i.e., Sub-syllable Overlap). Relative to the unrelated control, Full Syllable Overlap distractors facilitated naming in all stimuli onset asynchronies (SOAs) (-175, 0, or +175 ms) whereas Sub-syllable Overlap distractors exhibited facilitation only at 0-ms and +175-ms SOAs. Experiment 2 adopted a similar design to examine the possible influence of syllabic structure similarity on the results of Experiment 1. The target syllables were all CVC-structured. The phonological distractor was either a CVC (i.e., Syllable-structure Consistent) or CV (i.e., Syllable-structure Inconsistent) syllable. Comparable priming was observed between the two distractor conditions across the three SOAs. These results indicated that an earlier priming effect was observed with full syllable overlap than sub-syllabic overlap when the degree of segmental overlap was held constant (Experiment 1). The earlier syllable priming observed in Experiment 1 could not be attributed to the effect of syllabic-structure (Experiment 2), thereby suggesting that the syllable unit is important in Cantonese and is retrieved earlier than sub-syllabic components during phonological encoding.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6245687?pdf=render
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