“…Studies using an oral word reconstruction task showed that when English-, Spanish-, or Dutch-speaking adults are required to change one phoneme so as to transform a pseudoword (e.g., teeble) into a word, they prefer to preserve the consonantal material and alter a vowel (e.g., table), a pattern suggesting that consonants are more stable than vowels in lexical access and activation processes (Cutler, Sebastián-Gallés, Soler-Vilageliu, & van Ooijen, 2000;van Ooijen, 1996). This link between consonants and the lexicon was confirmed in an equivalent positron emission tomography (PET) scan study, showing greater activation for consonant transformations in the left inferior frontal gyrus, an area involved in lexical search (Sharp, Scott, Cutler, & Wise, 2005). Finally, such a consonant bias was also found in many written lexical decision studies using a priming paradigm, showing more priming by consonantal than vocalic information (for Spanish : Carreiras, Dunabeitia, & Molinaro, 2009a;Carreiras, Gillon-Dowens, Vergara, & Perea, 2009b; for English: Lee, Rayner, & Pollatsek, 2002;for French: New, Araujo, & Nazzi, 2008).…”