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Speech errors reflect the phonotactic constraints in recently spoken syllables, but not in recently heard syllables
Authors:Jill A. Warker  Ye Xu  Gary S. Dell  Cynthia Fisher
Affiliation:Beckman Institute, University of Illinois, 405 N. Mathews Ave., Urbana, IL 61801, United States
Abstract:Adults rapidly learn phonotactic constraints from brief production or perception experience. Three experiments asked whether this learning is modality-specific, occurring separately in production and perception, or whether perception transfers to production. Participant pairs took turns repeating syllables in which particular consonants were restricted to particular syllable positions. Speakers’ errors reflected learning of the constraints present in the sequences they produced, regardless of whether their partner produced syllables with the same constraints, or opposing constraints. Although partial transfer could be induced (Experiment 3), simply hearing and encoding syllables produced by others did not affect speech production to the extent that error patterns were altered. Learning of new phonotactic constraints was predominantly restricted to the modality in which those constraints were experienced.
Keywords:Phonotactic learning   Speech errors   Production   Perception
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