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- Phonological speech errors (also called sub-lexical errors) have been an important source of evidence for the psychological reality of phonological features and segments. In many speech errors, it appears that portions of the intended utterance are produced in an unintended order.
people.uleth.ca/~fangfang.li/Psychology3850/readings/Frisch2002_speechErrors.pdfThe phonetics of phonological speech errors: An acoustic ...
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.
- John Alderete
- Lang Speech. 2023 Mar; 66(1): 79-104.
- 10.1177/00238309211071045
- 2023/03
At the sublexical level, sounds may slip into unintended positions, as in blood clot in a certain area of the blain (brain, sfusedE-1419),1 but the resulting errors tend to conform to the phonotactic rules govern-ing well-formed words (Boomer & Laver, 1968; Garrett, 1975; Wells, 1951).
Phonological speech errors (also called sub-lexical errors) have been an important source of evidence for the psychological reality of phonological features and segments.
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.
In children, two types of phonological “errors” may occur: slips of the tongue and pathological speech. A slip of the tongue is considered a normal, non-systematic “error”, whereas a series of consistent speech “errors” is labeled as a speech pathology.
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Cross-linguistic trends in speech errors: Sub-lexical errors in Cantonese, John Alderete(SFU) Overview: Very few speech error collections have baselines large enough to establish significant error patterns, and only a small handful of these analyze facts in non-Indo-European languages.
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Though past research on the sound structure of speech errors has contributed greatly to our understanding of phonological encoding, most of this research comes from a small set of majority language...