“…In producing a novel sound sequence, a less segmented representation may render it difficult to assign the novel stimulus into a recoverable representation (Edwards, Beckman, & Munson, 2004;Fisher, Hunt, Chambers, & Church, 2001). Given that children with poor PA tend to attend to acoustic cues primarily associated with more global characteristics of speech (Mayo, Scobbie, Hewlett, & Waters, 2003;Nittrouer, 1996), it is not surprising that these children are slow in establishing segmented representations for novel words they just encounter (Bowey, 1996;Elbro & Jesen, 2005;de Jong, Seveke, & van Veen, 2000;Hu, 2003;Hu & Schuele, 2005;Mayringer & Wimmer, 2000). For example, in a study of paired-associate word learning ability, Hu and Schuele (2005) found that children with poorer PA were slower in learning auditory names that involved the construction of new phonological forms such as new L2 or L1 names than children with better PA.…”