Abstract

This study investigates how two factors, distribution and morphological alternation, affect speakers’ ability to group sounds into the same phoneme category. Previous findings indicate that allophonic variants of a single phoneme are rated as more similar than sounds belonging to separate phonemes. The present study builds on these findings by conducting a similarity rating task to investigate the processing of anterior and posterior coronal sibilants [s] and [ɕ/ʃ] in three languages in which the two sounds participate in different types of relationships: (i) English, in which [s] and [ʃ] occur in the same environment (e.g. see versus she); (ii) Korean, in which [s] and [ɕ] are in complementary distribution and participate in regular and productive morphological alternations; and (iii) Mandarin, in which [s] and [ɕ] are in complementary distribution but do not participate in morphological alternations due to its phonotactic restrictions. The results showed that both English and Mandarin speakers rated the...

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