“…Thus, potential costs of word/syllable misalignments in continuous speech processing might be strongly alleviated if the segmentation heuristic is sensitive to fine-grained phonetic details. Moreover, it should be noted that syllable-based segmentation strategies such as SOSH (Content, Kearns, & Frauenfelder, 2001) or that proposed by Cutler et al (2001) are not deterministic rules but heuristics, so that their effect could be modulated or compensated by other cues, such as lexical information. In line with this view, Fougeron, Frauenfelder, and Content (1999) compared lexical effects on phoneme monitoring and found that the decrease in the lexical effect due to the insertion of an initial epenthetic consonant (e.g., gacrobat) could be compensated when the inserted consonant had a lexical status (e.g., l'acrobat; see also Spinelli et al, 2000, for related findings).…”