However, sometimes children with cleft palate also have speech errors which develop as the result of an attempt to compensate for the inability to produce the target phoneme.
32.
The rate of speech errors produced is variable, with some patients showing only 10 % of productions being errors and others showing up to 80 % of speech production being incorrect.
33.
Other research topics concern speech repetition, the ability to map heard spoken words into the vocalizations needed to recreate them, which plays a key role in vocabulary expansion in children and speech errors.
34.
Part of the motivation for the distinction between performance and competence comes from speech errors : despite having a perfect understanding of the correct forms, a speaker of a language may unintentionally produce incorrect forms.
35.
If you said " straightly ", I would chalk it up to either being a speech error or you not being a native speaker . talk ) 04 : 12, 16 March 2014 ( UTC)
36.
Eventually, Guenther suggests, a mismatch develops between what a stutterer hears and what his speech muscles are doing : " The brain will interpret the mismatch as a speech error, and the whole system will reset ."
37.
The first type of " error " is considered by linguists to be standard language / colloquial language interference more than simple speech errors . . . talk ) 16 : 50, 21 March 2012 ( UTC)
38.
These two techniques allow researchers to watch the process whereby thoughts are transformed into a seamless flow of words, to see where this process breaks down and to show how people correct speech errors on the fly.
39.
Following are a few of the influential models of speech production that account for or incorporate the previously mentioned stages and include information discovered as a result of speech error studies and other disfluency data, such as tip-of-the-tongue research.
40.
He did not explicitly predict the repetition deficit, but did note that, unlike those with Wernicke's aphasia, conduction aphasics would be able to comprehend speech properly, and intriguingly, would be able to hear and understand their own speech errors, leading to frustration and self-correction.