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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. May 18, 2023 · Interestingly, 57 lexical substitutions (5.21%) are both semantically and form-related. Compared to the chance rates of these mixed errors from prior research (e.g., less than half of 1% in Dell et al., 1997), these errors are clearly above chance.

    • 10.5334/joc.278
    • 2023
    • J Cogn. 2023; 6(1): 26.
  3. 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. We explore the features of a corpus of naturally occurring word substitution speech errors.

    • Trevor A. Harley, Siobhan B. G. MacAndrew
    • 2001
  4. Dec 1, 1981 · In this way, substitution errors should not consist of two disjoint sets (a phonological and a semantic set), which would be pre- dicted if the lexicon were separated into a semantic and a phonological part.

    • Gary S. Dell, Peter A. Reich
    • 1981
  5. 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.

  6. Jan 1, 1992 · We describe two primary stages in the top-down process of lexical access in production, a stage of lemma access in which words are retrieved as syntactic-semantic entities, and a stage of phonological access in which the forms of the words are fleshed out.

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  8. 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.

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