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In large collections of speech errors, phonological patterns emerge. Speech errors are shaped by phonotactic constraints, markedness, frequency, and phonological representations of prosodic and segmental structure.
May 24, 2019 · 2. What is the empirical basis for speech error patterns that support a role for grammar? Take homes: • New results suggest a weaker role for phonotactics in speech errors • New data set for tone suggests a stronger role for tone as a planning unit than previously acknowledged.
Dec 31, 2006 · Earlier research focused on different types of errors including semantic and phonological errors while malapropisms, which refer to slips of the tongue involving whole word substitutions that...
Having established a plausible link between (certain) speech errors and the phonological component of the grammar, we may now ask how to connect an OT or HG grammatical theory—which makes specific claims about markedness—to speech error patterns.
- Matthew A Goldrick, Robert Daland
- 10.1017/S0952675709001742
- 2009
- 2009
This article investigates the phonological patterns in the SFU Speech Error Database (SFUSED) with these goals in mind. In particular, it examines the impact of language particular phonotactics on speech errors and the role of linguistic representations for syllables and tone.
Feb 8, 2022 · In particular, the Cantonese data were examined for nine psycholinguistic effects commonly used as a lens on word-form encoding. Detailed quantitative analysis found that Cantonese has eight of these effects, providing broader cross-linguistic support for models based on these patterns.
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How do phonological patterns emerge in large collections of speech errors?
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Do speech errors obey phonotactics?
Although errors can be introduced at different levels during speech planning and can involve larger units such as words or morphemes (Levelt, 1989), this paper focusses on phonological speech errors, in which individual abstract speech units, such as phonemes, appear to be misplaced.