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Brocklehurst, Paul H.; Corley, Martin – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2011
In their Covert Repair Hypothesis, Postma and Kolk (1993) suggest that people who stutter make greater numbers of phonological encoding errors, which are detected during the monitoring of inner speech and repaired, with stuttering-like disfluencies as a consequence. Here, we report an experiment that documents the frequency with which such errors…
Descriptors: Inner Speech (Subvocal), Stuttering, Phonology, Cognitive Processes
Corley, Martin; Brocklehurst, Paul H.; Moat, H. Susannah – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2011
To compare the properties of inner and overt speech, Oppenheim and Dell (2008) counted participants' self-reported speech errors when reciting tongue twisters either overtly or silently and found a bias toward substituting phonemes that resulted in words in both conditions, but a bias toward substituting similar phonemes only when speech was…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Articulation (Speech), Inner Speech (Subvocal), Phonemes