“…literature on locally time-reversed, interrupted, alternated, and filtered speech; Drullman, Festen, & Plomp, 1994a;Drullman, Festen, & Plomp, 1994b;Elliott & Theunissen, 2009;Ghitza, 2012;Peelle & Davis, 2012;Saberi & Perrott, 1999;Shannon, Zeng, Kamath, Wygonski, & Ekelid, 1995;Ueda, Nakajima, Ellermeier, & Kattner, 2017). However, the functional role of this neural entrainment in speech perception remains a topic of debate: is entrainment causally involved in shaping successful speech perception (Riecke, Formisano, Sorger, Başkent, & Gaudrain, 2018;Zoefel, Archer-Boyd, & Davis, 2018) or is it merely a response-driven epiphenomenon of speech processing (Obleser, Herrmann, & Henry, 2012)? The present study will put forward psychoacoustic findings suggesting that, not only does neural entrainment to a particular syllable rate shape the decoding of concurrent speech (Experiment 1), but also that neural entrainment might persist when the entraining rhythm has ceased, influencing the perception of subsequently presented words (Experiments 2 and 3).…”