“…In contrast, phonological inference models (Darcy et al, 2009;Gaskell & Marslen-Wilson, 1996Lee & Pater, 2008;Mitterer et al, 2013) also posit abstract representations, but argue that listeners use phonological context to recover an abstract surface form, working backward from the phonetic form. For instance, upon hearing an assimilated form like leam bacon, the listener recognizes that the [b] in bacon may license assimilation of a preceding coronal nasal, and so the listener can identify the intended lean.…”