“…Historically, distal rate effects on phoneme-level perception, e.g., for consonants like /g/ vs. /k/ differing in voice-onset time, have been recognized to be fairly fragile, with generally small effects on phonetic boundary shifts (Kidd, 1989;Summerfield, 1981;Wade & Holt, 2005). Recent studies have generalized knowledge of distal rate effects on speech perception by considering a wider array of phoneme-level perceptual ambiguities, both ambiguities in type of phoneme, e.g., / / versus / :/ in Dutch (Bosker, 2017), and number of phonemes, e.g., Canadian oats versus Canadian notes (Heffner et al, 2017;Reinisch, Jesse, & McQueen, 2011;Reinisch & Sjerps, 2013), and singleton/geminate contrasts (Mitterer, 2018) and have demonstrated effect sizes more comparable to those seen the Bdisappearing word^cases. While variability in study designs obviously raises caveats to any generalizations across these studiesincluding in the type of dependent measure used (e.g., temporal boundary shifts vs. proportion of responses indicating an extra unit)it tentatively appears to be the case that distal rate effects on phoneme-level perceptual ambiguities (vowel-length contrasts, phoneme count, singleton/geminate) may be less robust than distal rate effects on syllable-level perceptual ambiguities (leisure or time, I align vs.…”