In:The Linguistics Enterprise: From knowledge of language to knowledge in linguistics
Edited by Martin B.H. Everaert, Tom Lentz, Hannah N.M. De Mulder, Øystein Nilsen and Arjen Zondervan
[Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today 150] 2010
► pp. 213–234
Monitoring for speech errors has different functions in inner and overt speech
Published online: 13 January 2010
https://doi.org/10.1075/la.150.09noo
https://doi.org/10.1075/la.150.09noo
In this paper it is argued that monitoring for speech errors is not the same in inner speech and in overt speech. In inner speech it is meant to prevent the errors from becoming public, in overt speech to repair the damage caused by the errors. It is expected that in inner speech, but not in overt speech, more nonword errors are detected than real-word ones, and that overt repairs of errors detected in inner speech differ from overt repairs of errors detected in overt speech in that they have shorter offset-to-repair times, are spoken with raised instead of lowered intensity and pitch, and are less often accompanied by editing expressions. These hypotheses are tested against a collection of experimentally elicited spoonerisms and a collection of speech errors in spontaneous Dutch. The hypotheses are basically confirmed.
Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Nozari, Nazbanou, Michael Freund, Bonnie Breining, Brenda Rapp & Barry Gordon
Plug, Leendert
Nooteboom, Sieb G. & Quené Hugo
2014. Do speakers try to distract attention from their speech errors? The prosody of self-repairs. In Above and Beyond the Segments, ► pp. 203 ff.
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