Error patterns in children's phonological development are often described as simplifying processes that can interact with one another with different consequences. Some interactions limit the applicability of an error pattern, and others extend it to more words. Theories predict that error patterns interact to their full potential. While specific interactions have been documented for certain pairs of processes, no developmental study has shown that the range of typologically predicted interactions occurs for those processes. To determine whether this anomaly is an accidental gap or a systematic peculiarity of particular error patterns, two commonly occurring processes were considered, namely Deaffrication and Consonant Harmony. Results are r...
Anyone who has spent time around children knows that they speak differently than adults. They use wo...
The sources of knowledge that individuals use to make sim-ilarity judgments between words are though...
Two common and seemingly independent error patterns, namely con-sonant harmony and gliding, are exam...
This article documents the typological occurrence and interactions of two seemingly independent erro...
Two commonly occurring and independent error patterns in children's early speech are examined to det...
The phonology and clinically induced learning patterns of a female child with a phonological delay (...
This paper examines a range of predicted versus attested error patterns involving coronal fricatives...
Phonological chain shifts have been the focus of many theoretical, developmental, and clinical conce...
Consonant harmony, an assimilatory process affecting non-adjacent consonants, is found in both child...
This paper focuses on three seemingly unrelated error patterns in the sound system of a child with a...
Purpose In this study, the authors explored phonological pro...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. December 2010. Major: Linguistics. Advisors: Daniel Karv...
When they first begin to talk, children show characteristic consonant errors, which are often descri...
Results are reported from a descriptive and experimental study that was intended to evaluate compara...
Both real words and non-words have been shown to induce phonological change in children with phonolo...
Anyone who has spent time around children knows that they speak differently than adults. They use wo...
The sources of knowledge that individuals use to make sim-ilarity judgments between words are though...
Two common and seemingly independent error patterns, namely con-sonant harmony and gliding, are exam...
This article documents the typological occurrence and interactions of two seemingly independent erro...
Two commonly occurring and independent error patterns in children's early speech are examined to det...
The phonology and clinically induced learning patterns of a female child with a phonological delay (...
This paper examines a range of predicted versus attested error patterns involving coronal fricatives...
Phonological chain shifts have been the focus of many theoretical, developmental, and clinical conce...
Consonant harmony, an assimilatory process affecting non-adjacent consonants, is found in both child...
This paper focuses on three seemingly unrelated error patterns in the sound system of a child with a...
Purpose In this study, the authors explored phonological pro...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. December 2010. Major: Linguistics. Advisors: Daniel Karv...
When they first begin to talk, children show characteristic consonant errors, which are often descri...
Results are reported from a descriptive and experimental study that was intended to evaluate compara...
Both real words and non-words have been shown to induce phonological change in children with phonolo...
Anyone who has spent time around children knows that they speak differently than adults. They use wo...
The sources of knowledge that individuals use to make sim-ilarity judgments between words are though...
Two common and seemingly independent error patterns, namely con-sonant harmony and gliding, are exam...