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  1. Dec 31, 2006 · In mixed substitution errors the intrusion is both semantically and phonologically related to the target (e.g. 13 and 14). W e find mixed errors far more often

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  2. The shape of speech errors also supports fundamental assumptions in phonology. For example, the single phoneme effect states that most sound errors involve a single segment, and not sequences or features (Nooteboom 1969; Shattuck-Hufnagel 1983), giving psychological reality to phonological segments.

  3. Jan 1, 2023 · The mixed error effect is the finding that errors are often both phonologically and semantically related to the target; this includes blend errors (like ‘mainly/mostly’ → ‘monly’; Fromkin, 1971) and word substitutions or exchanges (‘start’ → ‘stop’; Dell, 1986). Two insights come from this observation.

  4. May 18, 2023 · The existence of synonym and subsumative errors is documented in a larger open access data set that supports a range of new investigations of the semantic structure of lexical substitution and word blend speech errors.

    • 10.5334/joc.278
    • 2023
    • J Cogn. 2023; 6(1): 26.
  5. Semantic errors are primarily sensitive to the properties of the semantic field involved, whereas phonological errors are sensitive to phonological properties of the targets and intrusions. KEY WORDS: speech production; speech errors; lexicalization; frequency; imageability.

    • Trevor A. Harley, Siobhan B. G. MacAndrew
    • 2001
  6. In this paper we investigate the effects of word substitution errors, such as those coming from automatic speech recognition errors (ASR), on several state-of-the-art sentence embedding methods.

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  8. Feb 8, 2022 · As explained in Section 2.3, sub-lexical errors are broken down by the type of process (e.g., substitution vs. addition of a sound), unit (segments, tone, and morphemes), and the distinction between phonological processes affecting categorical sound units and other processes (phonetic and reduction) that do not.