“…Nathan, Wells & Donlan, 1998;Nathan & Wells, 2001;Fraser Gupta 2005;Floccia, Goslin, Girard, & Konopczynski, 2006;Floccia, Butler, Goslin, & Ellis, 2009;Adank, Evans, Stuart-Smith, & Scott, 2009;Sumner & Samuel, 2009). The typical pattern is that speech in one's own accent is easier to understand than speech in a different regional accent, which in turn is easier to understand than non-native accented speech (Adank et al, 2009;Floccia et al, 2006; but see also Floccia et al, 2009). The processing costs associated with listening to other accents may arise because the acoustic-phonetic input from another accent produces either weak activation of intended words, and/or inappropriate activation of competitor words (Clopper, Pierrehumbert & Tamati, 2010;Dahan, Drucker & Scarborough, 2008).…”