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Overtensing and the effect of regularity
Authors:Joseph Paul Stemberger
Affiliation:1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, National Dong Hwa University, Hualien, 97401, Taiwan, China;2. CIMAP CNRS/CEA/ENSICAEN/Université de Caen Normandie, 6 Boulevard Maréchal Juin, 14050 Caen Cedex 4, France;1. Department of Speech Therapy, School of Rehabilitation Sciences, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran;2. Department of Rehabilitation Management, School of Rehabilitation Sciences, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran;1. Department of Speech Therapy, University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences, Tehran, Iran;2. Department of Speech Therapy, School of Rehabilitation Sciences, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran;3. Tehran Psychiatric Institute, School of Behavioral Sciences and Mental Health, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran;4. Department of Basic Sciences in Rehabilitation, School of Rehabilitation Sciences, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran;1. Department of Speech and Language Pathology, School of Rehabilitation Sciences, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran;2. Behavioral Sciences Research Center, Life Style Institute, Faculty of Nursing, Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran;3. Department of Basic Sciences, School of Rehabilitation Sciences, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran;4. Department of Speech Therapy, University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences (USWR), Tehran, Iran;5. Department of Psychology and Education of Exceptional Children, Allameh Tabataba''i University, Tehran, Iran
Abstract:Regularly inflected forms often behave differently in language production than irregular forms. These differences are often used to argue that irregular forms are listed in the lexicon but regular forms are produced by rule. Using an experimental speech production task with adults, it is shown that overtensing errors, where a tensed verb is used in place of an infinitive, predominantly involve irregular forms, but that the differences may be due to phonological confounds, not to regularity per se. Errors involve vowel‐changing irregular forms more than suffixing inflected forms, with at best a small difference between regular ‐ed and irregular ‐en. Frequency effects on overtensing errors require a model in which the past‐tense and base forms of the verb are in competition and in which activation functions are nonlinear, and rule out models with specialized subnetworks for past‐tense forms. Implications for theories of language production are discussed.
Keywords:Morphology  Language production  Errors  Dual‐mechanism models  Past tense  Activation functions
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