“…Notably, a substantial body of work has shown that temporal information influences phoneme category boundaries and best exemplars in a variety of languages (Fujisaki et al, 1975; Nooteboom and Doodeman, 1980; Summerfield, 1981; Volaitis and Miller, 1992; Miller and Wayland, 1993; Sommers et al, 1994; Traunmüller and Krull, 2003). In addition, more recent work suggests that timing cues also influence lexical access for larger linguistic units (Davis et al, 2002; Salverda et al, 2003; Christophe et al, 2004; Niebuhr and Kohler, 2011; Reinisch et al, 2011). For example, Salverda et al (2003) found that when listeners heard the syllable ham , which could be either the monosyllabic word “ham” or the first syllable of the word “hamster,” they were less likely to consider “hamster” as a lexical candidate when durational information matched the monosyllabic parse, “ham.”…”