Although the relationship between sound and meaning in
language is arbitrary, reliable correspondences between sound
and meaning have been found in natural language. These
sound symbolic relationships affect word learning, but less is
known about how sound symbolism affects online processing
during learning or for well-learned stimuli. We use the visual
world paradigm and an artificial lexicon featuring carefully
controlled sound symbolic correspondences to examine the
effects of sound symbolism on the online processing of novel
and well-learned stimuli. Initially, participants chose novel
shapes matching the sound symbolic properties of the word
above chance, reliably fixating consistent shapes around word
offset. As learning approached ceiling, accuracy and reaction
time differences between matching and mismatching stimuli
disappeared but a disadvantage in the online processing of
mismatching stimuli persisted in the form of lagging target
fixations. This suggests that sound symbolism affects the
online processing of spoken stimuli even for well-learned
words.