Article
Publicly Available
Gradience in morphological decomposability: Evidence from the perception of audiovisually incongruent speech
-
Azra N. Ali
Published/Copyright:
November 4, 2010
Published Online: 2010-11-4
Published in Print: 2010-10-1
© 2010 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/New York
Articles in the same Issue
- Introduction: phonetic cues and generalisations in the lexicon
- Does prosodic constituency signal relative predictability? A Smooth Signal Redundancy hypothesis
- Gradience in morphological decomposability: Evidence from the perception of audiovisually incongruent speech
- Detailed phonetic memory for multi-word and part-word sequences
- Phonetic Cues to Lexical Structure: Comments on the papers by Turk, Ali and Ingleby, and Wade and Möbius
- Abstraction-based Efficiency in the Lexicon
- Generalizing over lexicons to predict consonant mastery
- Metalinguistic judgments of phonotactics by monolinguals and bilinguals
- Velar palatalization in Russian and artificial grammar: Constraints on models of morphophonology
- Harmony versus the OCP: Vowel and Consonant Cooccurrence in the Lexicon
- The emergent paradigm in Laboratory Phonology: Phonological categories and statistical generalisation in Cutler, Beckman and Edwards, Frisch and Bréa-Spahn, Kapatsinski, and Walter
- Signal-based and expectation-based factors in the perception of prosodic prominence
Articles in the same Issue
- Introduction: phonetic cues and generalisations in the lexicon
- Does prosodic constituency signal relative predictability? A Smooth Signal Redundancy hypothesis
- Gradience in morphological decomposability: Evidence from the perception of audiovisually incongruent speech
- Detailed phonetic memory for multi-word and part-word sequences
- Phonetic Cues to Lexical Structure: Comments on the papers by Turk, Ali and Ingleby, and Wade and Möbius
- Abstraction-based Efficiency in the Lexicon
- Generalizing over lexicons to predict consonant mastery
- Metalinguistic judgments of phonotactics by monolinguals and bilinguals
- Velar palatalization in Russian and artificial grammar: Constraints on models of morphophonology
- Harmony versus the OCP: Vowel and Consonant Cooccurrence in the Lexicon
- The emergent paradigm in Laboratory Phonology: Phonological categories and statistical generalisation in Cutler, Beckman and Edwards, Frisch and Bréa-Spahn, Kapatsinski, and Walter
- Signal-based and expectation-based factors in the perception of prosodic prominence