“…Instead of fixating on the analogy between perception and linguistic understanding, we have good grounds to suppose that at the psychological level some of the underlying processes necessary for understanding an utterance are purely perceptual (speech signal processing), whereas other seem to be cognitive (processing of a meaning communicated with an utterance). Linguistic comprehension relies on several processing stages and encompasses both perceptual elements (the recognition of speech sounds, speaker's voice, tone and accent, O'Callaghan, 2011, 2015; Drożdżowicz, 2020) and elements that are characteristic for grasping or understanding meaning (e.g., Dodd, 2014). However, that some of the initial processes responsible for speech sound perception that underlie linguistic comprehension are perceptual and may thus result in some perceptual experiences, does not imply that the experience we typically have when we come to understand an utterance is perceptual.…”