One of the major empirical sources of theories of speech production are speech errors in normal speakers. Speech errors occurring during lexicalisation of a concept to be expressed can result in whole-word substitutions that are target related in form and/or meaning or can appear as nonword productions (neologism). Similar error phenomena have been reported for aphasic patients. The present study describes the aphasic, HZ, who produced mainly form-related word substitutions and neologisms in several single-word processing tasks (picture naming, repetition, and reading aloud). Ln picture naming, meaning-related substitutions also occurred as well as substitutions that were related both in meaning and form (mixed errors). Three hypotheses of the origin of formal errors were tested: the full interactive activation hypothesis postulating meaning-form interactions, the lexical (form) retrieval hypothesis, and the post-lexical phonological encoding hypothesis. HZ's performance on repetition and reading aloud (tests showed no mixed errors and no effects of imageability and of target frequency on formal errors) failed to support the predictions of the first two hypotheses. However, the phonological encoding hypotheses (enriched by a comprehension-based editor) could also not account for the data (e.g. for some task-specific asymmetries in the error pattern). Instead, an attempt is made to account for formal and mixed errors by construing word form encoding as an interactively organised component within a two-stage model of lexicalisation. Formal errors are traced back to interactions between lexical forms and sublexical phonological information during the second stage of lexicalisation. Mixed errors occur when lexical forms of the target's semantic competitors are involved in word form encoding.
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Univ Sheffield, Dept Human Commun Sci, Sheffield S10 2TA, S Yorkshire, EnglandUniv Sheffield, Dept Human Commun Sci, Sheffield S10 2TA, S Yorkshire, England
Herbert, Ruth
Best, Wendy
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UCL, Dept Human Commun Sci, London, EnglandUniv Sheffield, Dept Human Commun Sci, Sheffield S10 2TA, S Yorkshire, England
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Univ N Carolina, Dept Allied Hlth Sci, Div Speech & Hearing Sci, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USAUniv N Carolina, Dept Allied Hlth Sci, Div Speech & Hearing Sci, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA
Haley, Katarina L.
Cunningham, Kevin T.
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Univ N Carolina, Dept Allied Hlth Sci, Div Speech & Hearing Sci, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USAUniv N Carolina, Dept Allied Hlth Sci, Div Speech & Hearing Sci, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA
Cunningham, Kevin T.
Jacks, Adam
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Univ N Carolina, Dept Allied Hlth Sci, Div Speech & Hearing Sci, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USAUniv N Carolina, Dept Allied Hlth Sci, Div Speech & Hearing Sci, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA
Jacks, Adam
Richardson, Jessica D.
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Univ New Mexico, Dept Speech & Hearing Sci, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USAUniv N Carolina, Dept Allied Hlth Sci, Div Speech & Hearing Sci, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA
Richardson, Jessica D.
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Harmon, Tyson
Turkeltaub, Peter E.
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Georgetown Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Neurol, Washington, DC 20007 USA
MedStar Natl Rehabil Hosp, Washington, DC USAUniv N Carolina, Dept Allied Hlth Sci, Div Speech & Hearing Sci, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA