van Linden Sabine, Stekelenburg Jeroen J, Tuomainen Jyrki, Vroomen Jean
Psychonomics Laboratory, Tilburg University, P.O. Box 90153, 5000 LE Tilburg, The Netherlands.
Neurosci Lett. 2007 Jun 8;420(1):49-52. doi: 10.1016/j.neulet.2007.04.006. Epub 2007 Apr 5.
Lexical information can bias categorization of an ambiguous phoneme and subsequently evoke a shift in the phonetic boundary. Here, we explored the extent to which this phenomenon is perceptual in nature. Listeners were asked to ignore auditory stimuli presented in a typical oddball sequence in which the standard was an ambiguous sound halfway between /t/ and /p/ embedded in a Dutch word normally ending in /t/ ('vloot', meaning 'fleet') or /p/ ('hoop', meaning 'hope'). As deviant served the non-ambiguous sound /t/ embedded in the same context. The amplitude of the MMN-response, indexing the perceptual difference between the ambiguous sound and unambiguous /t/ was bigger for the p-word 'hoop' than the t-word 'vloot'. This result is taken as an indication that lexical information actually reached down to early perceptual processing stages.