Studies of sound symbolism have shown that people can
associate sound and meaning in consistent ways when
presented with maximally contrastive stimulus pairs of
nonwords such as bouba/kiki (rounded/sharp) or mil/mal
(small/big). Recent work has shown the effect extends to
antonymic words from natural languages and has proposed a
role for shared cross-modal correspondences in biasing form-
to-meaning associations. An important open question is how
the associations work, and particularly what the role is of
sound-symbolic matches versus mismatches. We report on a
learning task designed to distinguish between three existing
theories by using a spectrum of sound-symbolically matching,
mismatching, and neutral (neither matching nor mismatching)
stimuli. Synthesized stimuli allow us to control for prosody,
and the inclusion of a neutral condition allows a direct test of
competing accounts. We find evidence for a sound-symbolic
match boost, but not for a mismatch difficulty compared to
the neutral condition.