This paper reports two experiments designed to investigate whether lexical bias in phonological speech errors is caused by immediate feedback of activation, by self-monitoring of inner speech, or by both. The experiments test a number of predictions derived from a model of self-monitoring of inner speech. This model assumes that, after an error in inner speech, (1) an early interruption of speech may be made when speech was initiated too hastily, (2) the error may be covertly repaired, leading to the correct target, (3) the error may be covertly replaced by another speech error, or (4) an error may go undetected, leading to a completed spoonerism. This model of self-monitoring was supported by the speech errors observed in two SLIP experime...
The within-word and within-utterance time course of internal and external self-monitoring is investi...
This study explores what repairs in the spontaneous production of speech reveal about the psycholing...
Psychologists normally attribute the surfacing of phonological speech errors to one of two factors: ...
This paper reports two experiments designed to investigate whether lexical bias in phonological spee...
This paper reports two experiments designed to investigate whether lexical bias in phonological spee...
This paper attempts to answer two questions: (a) What is the cause of lexical bias in phonological s...
The lexical bias effect refers to the fact that phonological errors result in real words more often ...
A monitoring bias account is often used to explain speech error patterns that seem to be the result ...
To compare the properties of inner and overt speech, Oppenheim and Dell (2008) counted participants'...
This chapter proposes some improvements on a method for eliciting speech errors, the so-called SLIP ...
96 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.Models of spoken word producti...
We report two four-word tongue twister experiments eliciting consonantal errors and their repairs, i...
The lexical bias effect is the tendency for phonological speech errors to result in words more often...
This study explores what repairs in the spontaneous production of speech reveal about the psycholing...
This paper focuses on the source of self-repairs of segmental speech errors during self-monitoring. ...
The within-word and within-utterance time course of internal and external self-monitoring is investi...
This study explores what repairs in the spontaneous production of speech reveal about the psycholing...
Psychologists normally attribute the surfacing of phonological speech errors to one of two factors: ...
This paper reports two experiments designed to investigate whether lexical bias in phonological spee...
This paper reports two experiments designed to investigate whether lexical bias in phonological spee...
This paper attempts to answer two questions: (a) What is the cause of lexical bias in phonological s...
The lexical bias effect refers to the fact that phonological errors result in real words more often ...
A monitoring bias account is often used to explain speech error patterns that seem to be the result ...
To compare the properties of inner and overt speech, Oppenheim and Dell (2008) counted participants'...
This chapter proposes some improvements on a method for eliciting speech errors, the so-called SLIP ...
96 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.Models of spoken word producti...
We report two four-word tongue twister experiments eliciting consonantal errors and their repairs, i...
The lexical bias effect is the tendency for phonological speech errors to result in words more often...
This study explores what repairs in the spontaneous production of speech reveal about the psycholing...
This paper focuses on the source of self-repairs of segmental speech errors during self-monitoring. ...
The within-word and within-utterance time course of internal and external self-monitoring is investi...
This study explores what repairs in the spontaneous production of speech reveal about the psycholing...
Psychologists normally attribute the surfacing of phonological speech errors to one of two factors: ...