What are Roles of Stimulus Situation and Material Type in Short-term Memory Encoding?: A Signal Detection Theory Approach

Author(s):  
Dun Niu ◽  
Xiu Xu ◽  
Xiaoxing Li ◽  
Zhong Li
Author(s):  
Anahita Basirat ◽  
Cédric Patin ◽  
Jérémie Jozefowiez

Abstract Focusing on the Sonority Sequencing Principle (SSP), we investigated the extent to which adult native speakers of French are sensitive to sonority-related constraints compared to lexical attestedness. In a non-word acceptability task, participants were asked to rate the acceptability of three types of non-words using a 6-point scale: non-words with attested sonority rising onset, non-words with unattested sonority rising onset, and non-words with unattested sonority falling onset. Data analysis was done using the signal detection theory approach to measure sensitivity of participants to lexical attestedness and to phonological well-formedness (i.e., respecting or violating the SSP). The results showed that speakers distinguished well-formed and ill-formed forms even when lexical attestedness was controlled for. This is consistent with previous findings on sonority projection effects. Participants were more sensitive to lexical attestedness than phonological well-formedness. Future research using computational models should investigate mechanisms that could account for these findings, namely whether a similar result would be obtained without including any assumption about the SSP in these models.


NeuroImage ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 ◽  
pp. 475-486 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steffen Lenk ◽  
Annet Bluschke ◽  
Christian Beste ◽  
Emilia Iannilli ◽  
Veit Rößner ◽  
...  

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