The curious case of competition in Spanish speech production

In previous studies in English examining the influence of phonological neighbourhood density in spoken word production, words with many similar sounding words, or a dense neighbourhood, were produced more quickly and accurately than words with few similar sounding words, or a sparse neighbourhood. T...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inLanguage and cognitive processes Vol. 21; no. 6; pp. 760 - 770
Main Authors Vitevitch, Michael S., Stamer, Melissa K.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hove Taylor & Francis Group 01.09.2006
Colchester Taylor & Francis
Psychology Press
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Summary:In previous studies in English examining the influence of phonological neighbourhood density in spoken word production, words with many similar sounding words, or a dense neighbourhood, were produced more quickly and accurately than words with few similar sounding words, or a sparse neighbourhood. The influence of phonological neighbourhood density on the process of spoken word production in Spanish was examined with a picture-naming task. The results showed that pictures with Spanish names from sparse neighbourhoods were named more quickly than pictures with Spanish names from dense neighbourhoods. The present pattern of results is the opposite of what has been previously found in speech production in English. We hypothesise that differences in the morphology of Spanish and English and/or the location in the word where phonological neighbours tend to occur may contribute to the processing differences observed in the two languages.
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ISSN:0169-0965
1464-0732
DOI:10.1080/01690960500287196