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Behavioral interference or facilitation does not distinguish between competitive and noncompetitive accounts of lexical selection in word production
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In: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, vol 43, iss 43 (2021)
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Behavioral interference or facilitation does not distinguish between competitive and noncompetitive accounts of lexical selection in word production ...
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Behavioral interference or facilitation does not distinguish between competitive and noncompetitive accounts of lexical selection in word production ...
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Resource allocation in phonological working memory: Same or different principles from vision? ...
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Learning in complex, multi-component cognitive systems: Different learning challenges within the same system
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In: J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn (2018)
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Investigating the origin of nonfluency in aphasia: A path modeling approach to neuropsychology
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The effects of utterance timing and stimulation of left prefrontal cortex on the production of referential expressions
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Did I say dog or cat? A study of semantic error detection and correction in children
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Cognitive control during selection and repair in word production
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Abstract:
Production of an intended word entails selection processes, in which first the lexical item and then its segments are selected among competitors, as well as processes that covertly or overtly repair dispreferred words. In two experiments, we studied the locus of the control processes involved in selection (selection control) and intercepting errors (post-monitoring control). Selection control was studied by manipulating the overlap (contextual similarity) in either semantics or in segments between two objects that participants repeatedly named. Post-monitoring control was examined by asking participants to reverse, within each block, the name of the two objects that were either semantically- or segmentally-related, thus suppressing a potent, but incorrect, response in favor of an alternative (reversal). Results showed robust costs of both contextual similarity (which increased with the degree of similarity between target and context) and reversal, but the two did not interact with one another. Analysis of individual differences revealed no reliable correlation between the cost of contextual similarity when pairs were semantically- or segmentally-related, suggesting stage-specific selection control processes. On the other hand, the cost of reversal was reliably correlated between semantically- and segmentally-related pairs, implying a different control process that is shared by both stages of production. Collectively, these results support a model in which selection control operates separately at lexical and segmental selection stages, but post-monitoring control operates on the segmentally-encoded outcome.
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Article
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5268164/ https://doi.org/10.1080/23273798.2016.1157194 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28133620
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The interplay of local attraction, context and domain-general cognitive control in activation and suppression of semantic distractors during sentence comprehension
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The ventrolateral prefrontal cortex facilitates processing of sentential context to locate referents
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Phonological similarity affects production of gestures, even in the absence of overt speech
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The Effects of Anodal Stimulation of the Left Prefrontal Cortex on Sentence Production ...
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Voxel-based lesion-parameter mapping: Identifying the neural correlates of a computational model of word production
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Evidence for a Non-Lexical Influence on Children’s Auditory Repetition of Familiar Words
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