摘要:With neurophysiological (N100) and explicit behavioral measures (two-alternative forcedchoice categorization), we investigated how the processing of nasal segments of German
is affected by following context phonemes and their place of articulation. We investigated
pre-lexical processing, with speech stimuli excised from naturally spoken utterances. Participants heard nasals (/n/, /m/, and place-assimilated /n
0
/), both with and without a subsequent
context phoneme. Context phonemes were voiced or voiceless, and either shared or did
not share their place of articulation with the nasals. The explicit forced-choice categorization of the isolated nasals showed /n
0
/ to be in-between the clear categorizations for /n/
and /m/. In early, implicit processing, /m/ had a significantly higher N100 amplitude than
both /n/ and /n
0
/, with, most importantly, no difference between the latter two. When presented in context (e.g., /nb/, /mt/), explicit categorizations were affected by both the nasal
and the context phoneme: a consecutive labial led to more M-categorizations, a following
alveolar to more N-categorizations. The early processing of the nasal/+context stimuli in
the N100 showed strong effects of context, modulated by the type of preceding nasal. Crucially, the context effects on assimilated nasals /n
0
/ were clearly different to effects on /m/,
and indistinguishable from effects on /n/. The grouping of the isolated nasals in the N100
replicates previous findings, using magnetoencephalography and a different set of stimuli.
Importantly, the same grouping was observed in the nasal/+context stimuli. Most models
that deal with assimilation are either challenged by the mere existence of phonemic context effects, and/or use mechanisms that rely on lexical information. Our results support
the existence, and early activation, of pre-lexical categories for phonemic segments. We
suggest that due to experience with assimilation, specific speech-sound categories are
flexible enough to accept (or even ignore) inappropriate place cues, in particular when the
appropriate place information is still present in the signal.