• Title of article

    Phonological–lexical activation: A lexical component or an output buffer? Evidence from aphasic errors

  • Author/Authors

    Romani، نويسنده , , Cristina and Galluzzi، نويسنده , , Claudia and Olson، نويسنده , , Andrew، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    19
  • From page
    217
  • To page
    235
  • Abstract
    Single word production requires that phoneme activation is maintained while articulatory conversion is taking place. Word serial recall, connected speech and non-word production (repetition and spelling) are all assumed to involve a phonological output buffer. A crucial question is whether the same memory resources are also involved in single word production. We investigate this question by assessing length and positional effects in the single word repetition and reading of six aphasic patients. We expect a damaged buffer to result in error rates per phoneme which increase with word length and in position effects. Although our patients had trouble with phoneme activation (they made mainly errors of phoneme selection), they did not show the effects expected from a buffer impairment. These results show that phoneme activation cannot be automatically equated with a buffer. We hypothesize that the phonemes of existing words are kept active though permanent links to the word node. Thus, the sustained activation needed for their articulation will come from the lexicon and will have different characteristics from the activation needed for the short-term retention of an unbound set of units. We conclude that there is no need and no evidence for a phonological buffer in single word production.
  • Keywords
    Phonological output buffer , Aphasia , Length effects , Phonological errors , Positional effects , Buffer impairment
  • Journal title
    Cortex
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Cortex
  • Record number

    2300628