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Original Articles

Are speech error patterns affected by a monitoring bias?

Pages 856-891 | Published online: 26 Mar 2007

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (7)

Inés Antón-Méndez & RobertJ. Hartsuiker. (2010) Morphophonological and conceptual effects on Dutch subject–verb agreement. Language and Cognitive Processes 25:5, pages 728-748.
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Marianne Pouplier & Louis Goldstein. (2010) Intention in articulation: Articulatory timing in alternating consonant sequences and its implications for models of speech production. Language and Cognitive Processes 25:5, pages 616-649.
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Falk Huettig & RobertJ. Hartsuiker. (2010) Listening to yourself is like listening to others: External, but not internal, verbal self-monitoring is based on speech perception. Language and Cognitive Processes 25:3, pages 347-374.
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Els Severens, Elie Ratinckx, Victor S. Ferreira & Robert J. Hartsuiker. (2008) Are phonological influences on lexical (mis)selection the result of a monitoring bias?. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 61:11, pages 1687-1709.
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Julie Franck, Gabriella Vigliocco, Inés Antón-Méndez, Simona Collina & UlrichH. Frauenfelder. (2008) The interplay of syntax and form in sentence production: A cross-linguistic study of form effects on agreement. Language and Cognitive Processes 23:3, pages 329-374.
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Matthew Goldrick. (2006) Limited interaction in speech production: Chronometric, speech error, and neuropsychological evidence. Language and Cognitive Processes 21:7-8, pages 817-855.
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F.-Xavier Alario, Albert Costa, VictorS. Ferreira & MartinJ. Pickering. (2006) Architectures, representations and processes of language production. Language and Cognitive Processes 21:7-8, pages 777-789.
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Articles from other publishers (17)

Laurel Brehm. 2023. Speaking, Writing and Communicating. Speaking, Writing and Communicating 1 39 .
Hanna S. Gauvin & Robert J. Hartsuiker. (2020) Towards a New Model of Verbal Monitoring. Journal of Cognition 3:1.
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Elizabeth R Schotter, Chuchu Li & Tamar H Gollan. (2019) What reading aloud reveals about speaking: Regressive saccades implicate a failure to monitor, not inattention, in the prevalence of intrusion errors on function words. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 72:8, pages 2032-2045.
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Christine Mooshammer, Mark Tiede, Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel & Louis Goldstein. (2019) Towards the Quantification of Peggy Babcock: Speech Errors and Their Position within the Word. Phonetica 76:5, pages 363-396.
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Anneke Slis & Pascal van Lieshout. (2016) The Effect of Auditory Information on Patterns of Intrusions and Reductions. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research 59:3, pages 430-445.
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Jordana R. Heller & Matthew Goldrick. (2014) Grammatical constraints on phonological encoding in speech production. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 21:6, pages 1576-1582.
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Darren Tanner, Janet Nicol & Laurel Brehm. (2014) The time-course of feature interference in agreement comprehension: Multiple mechanisms and asymmetrical attraction. Journal of Memory and Language 76, pages 195-215.
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Leendert Plug & Paul Carter. (2014) Timing and tempo in spontaneous phonological error repair. Journal of Phonetics 45, pages 52-63.
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Sieb G. Nooteboom & Hugo Quené. (2013) Heft lemisphere: Exchanges predominate in segmental speech errors. Journal of Memory and Language 68:1, pages 26-38.
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SARAH BERNOLET, ROBERT J. HARTSUIKER & MARTIN J. PICKERING. (2011) Effects of phonological feedback on the selection of syntax: Evidence from between-language syntactic priming. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 15:3, pages 503-516.
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Greig I. de Zubicaray, Michele Miozzo, Kori Johnson, Niels O. Schiller & Katie L. McMahon. (2012) Independent Distractor Frequency and Age-of-Acquisition Effects in Picture–Word Interference: fMRI Evidence for Post-lexical and Lexical Accounts according to Distractor Type. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 24:2, pages 482-495.
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Elisah Dhooge & Robert J. Hartsuiker. (2012) Lexical selection and verbal self-monitoring: Effects of lexicality, context, and time pressure in picture-word interference. Journal of Memory and Language 66:1, pages 163-176.
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Els Severens, Ine Janssens, Simone Kühn, Marcel Brass & Robert J. Hartsuiker. (2011) When the brain tames the tongue: Covert editing of inappropriate language. Psychophysiology 48:9, pages 1252-1257.
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Gary M. Oppenheim & Gary S. Dell. (2010) Motor movement matters: The flexible abstractness of inner speech. Memory & Cognition 38:8, pages 1147-1160.
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Nazbanou Nozari & Gary S. Dell. (2009) More on lexical bias: How efficient can a “lexical editor” be?. Journal of Memory and Language 60:2, pages 291-307.
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Els Severens, Bernadette M. Jansma & Robert J. Hartsuiker. (2008) Morphophonological influences on the comprehension of subject–verb agreement: An ERP study. Brain Research 1228, pages 135-144.
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Albert Costa, Bjorn Roelstraete & Robert J. Hartsuiker. (2006) The lexical bias effect in bilingual speech production: Evidence for feedback between lexical and sublexical levels across languages. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 13:6, pages 972-977.
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