Perceptual Bias in Speech Error Data Collection: Insights from Spanish Speech Errors

This paper studies the reliability and validity of naturalistic speech errors as a tool for language production research. Possible biases when collecting naturalistic speech errors are identified and specific predictions derived. These patterns are then contrasted with published reports from Germanic languages (English, German and Dutch) and one Romance language (Spanish). Unlike findings in the Germanic languages, Spanish speech errors show many patterns which run contrary to those expected from bias: (1) more phonological errors occur between words than within word; (2) word-initial consonants are less likely to participate in errors than word-medial consonants, (3) errors are equally likely in stressed and in unstressed syllables, (4) perseverations are more frequent than anticipations, and (5) there is no trace of a lexical bias. We present a new corpus of Spanish speech errors collected by many theoretically naïve observers (whereas the only corpus available so far was collected by two highly trained theoretically informed observers), give a general overview of it, and use it to replicate previous reports. In spite of the different susceptibility of these methods to bias, results were remarkably similar in both corpora and again contrary to predictions from bias. As a result, collecting speech errors “in the wild” seems to be free of bias to a reasonable extent even when using a multiple-collector method. The observed contrasting patterns between Spanish and Germanic languages arise as true cross-linguistic differences.

[1]  J. Laver,et al.  Slips of the tongue. , 1968, The British journal of disorders of communication.

[2]  Louis Goldstein,et al.  Consonant features in speech errors , 1980 .

[3]  Victor S. Ferreira,et al.  The state of the art in speech error research : proceedings of the LSA institute workshop , 2007 .

[4]  Bernard J. Baars,et al.  Experimental slips and human error , 1992 .

[5]  A Antonie Cohen,et al.  Errors of speech and their implication for understanding the strategy of language users , 1966 .

[6]  A. Meyer Investigation of phonological encoding through speech error analyses: Achievements, limitations, and alternatives , 1992, Cognition.

[7]  Joseph Paul Stemberger,et al.  Radical underspecification in language production , 1991, Phonology.

[8]  G. S. Dell,et al.  Disordered Speech Production in Aphasic and Normal Speakers , 1994, Brain and Language.

[9]  D. Mackay The Organization of Perception and Action , 1987 .

[10]  A. Ellis Progress in the psychology of language , 1985 .

[11]  G S Dell,et al.  A spreading-activation theory of retrieval in sentence production. , 1986, Psychological review.

[12]  Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel,et al.  The Limited Use of Distinctive Features and Markedness in Speech Production: Evidence from Speech Error Data. , 1979 .

[13]  Trevor A. Harley,et al.  Constraints Upon Word Substitution Speech Errors , 2001, Journal of psycholinguistic research.

[14]  Kazuhiro Kawachi Practice Effects on Speech Production Planning: Evidence from Slips of the Tongue in Spontaneous vs. Preplanned Speech in Japanese , 2002, Journal of psycholinguistic research.

[15]  Nomen Leyden studies in linguistics and phonetics , 1969 .

[16]  Robert J. Hartsuiker,et al.  The addition bias in Dutch and Spanish phonological speech errors: The role of structural context , 2002 .

[17]  D. G. MacKay,et al.  Output editing for lexical status in artificially elicited slips of the tongue , 1975 .

[18]  Jenn-Yeu Chen,et al.  The representation and processing of tone in Mandarin Chinese: Evidence from slips of the tongue , 1999, Applied Psycholinguistics.

[19]  Trevor A. Harley,et al.  A Critique of Top-down Independent Levels Models of Speech Production: Evidence from Non-plan-Internal Speech Errors , 1984, Cogn. Sci..

[20]  José E. García-Albea,et al.  Movement errors and levels of processing in sentence production , 1989 .

[21]  Frank Wijnen Incidental word and sound errors in young speakers , 1991 .

[22]  Joseph Paul Stemberger,et al.  The nature of segments in the lexicon: Evidence from speech errors☆ , 1982 .

[23]  Gary S. Dell,et al.  Effects of Frequency and Vocabulary Type on Phonological Speech Errors , 1990 .

[24]  Kathryn Bock,et al.  A sketchbook of production problems , 1991 .

[25]  Joseph Paul Stemberger,et al.  Speech errors in early child language production , 1989 .

[26]  Sieb G. Nooteboom,et al.  The tongue slips into patterns , 1969 .

[27]  Frederick J. Newmeyer Linguistic theory : extensions and implications , 1988 .

[28]  Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi,et al.  Where is the length effect? A cross-linguistic study. , 1998 .

[29]  J. Stemberger Apparent anti-frequency effects in language production: The Addition Bias and phonological underspecification☆ , 1991 .

[30]  Gordon D. A. Brown,et al.  Serial Control of Phonology in Speech Production: A Hierarchical Model , 2000, Cognitive Psychology.

[31]  Victoria A. Fromkin,et al.  The Non-Anomalous Nature of Anomalous Utterances , 1971 .

[32]  Bernard J. Baars,et al.  A Dozen Competing-Plans Techniques for Inducing Predictable Slips in Speech and Action , 1992 .

[33]  Joseph Paul Stemberger,et al.  Structural errors in normal and agrammatic speech , 1984 .

[34]  K. Lashley The problem of serial order in behavior , 1951 .

[35]  D. G. MacKay Spoonerisms: the structure of errors in the serial order of speech. , 1970, Neuropsychologia.

[36]  G. Dell,et al.  Language production and serial order: a functional analysis and a model. , 1997, Psychological review.

[37]  F. Cuetos,et al.  Diccionario de frecuencias de las unidades lingüísticas del castellano , 1995 .

[38]  Jenn-Yeu Chen,et al.  Word-Form Encoding in Mandarin Chinese as Assessed by the Implicit , 2002 .

[39]  Takashi Otake,et al.  Phonological structure and language processing: Cross-linguistic studies , 1996 .

[40]  Rudolf Meringer,et al.  Versprechen und Verlesen: Eine psychologisch-linguistische Studie. New edition , 1978 .

[41]  F. Newmeyer Linguistics: The Cambridge Survey , 1989 .

[42]  M. F. Garrett,et al.  The Analysis of Sentence Production1 , 1975 .

[43]  B. Baars Experimental slips and human error : exploring the architecture of volition , 1992 .

[44]  M. Meyerhoff,et al.  Working papers in linguistics , 1994 .

[45]  B MacWhinney,et al.  Frequency and the lexical storage of regularly inflected forms , 1986, Memory & cognition.

[46]  Victoria A. Fromkin,et al.  Linguistics: The Cambridge Survey: Grammatical aspects of speech errors , 1988 .

[47]  A. Cutler Slips of the Tongue and Language Production , 1982 .

[48]  V. Fromkin Speech errors as linguistic evidence , 1976 .

[49]  Alan Garnham,et al.  Slips of the tongue in the London-Lund corpus of spontaneous conversation , 1981 .

[50]  Manuel Carreiras,et al.  Language processing in Spanish , 1997 .

[51]  Thomas Berg,et al.  Phonological processing in a syllable-timed language with pre-final stress: Evidence from spanish speech error data , 1991 .

[52]  Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel,et al.  The representation of phonological information during speech production planning:evidence from vowel errors in spontaneous speech , 1986, Phonology.

[53]  W. Levelt,et al.  Speaking: From Intention to Articulation , 1990 .

[54]  M. Garrett Levels of processing in sentence production , 1980 .

[55]  José E. García-Albea,et al.  On the autonomy of phonological encoding: Evidence from slips of the tongue in Spanish , 1991 .

[56]  H. Gross Errors in Linguistic Performance: Slips of the Tongue, Ear, Pen, and Hand , 1983 .

[57]  Willem J. M. Levelt,et al.  A theory of lexical access in speech production , 1999, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[58]  Gary S. Dell,et al.  Stages in sentence production: An analysis of speech error data , 1981 .

[59]  A. Cutler The reliability of speech error data , 1981 .

[60]  S. Freud,et al.  Psicopatología de la vida cotidiana , 1943 .

[61]  K Bock,et al.  Language production: Methods and methodologies , 1996, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[62]  R. Ferber Slip of the tongue or slip of the ear? On the perception and transcription of naturalistic slips of the tongue , 1991, Journal of psycholinguistic research.

[63]  Brian Butterworth,et al.  Speech and talk , 1980 .

[64]  Joseph Paul Stemberger,et al.  The Reliability and Replicability of Naturalistic Speech Error Data A Comparison with Experimentally Induced Errors , 1992 .

[65]  Albert Costa,et al.  Abstract phonological structure in language production : Evidence from Spanish , 1998 .

[66]  S. Shattuck-Hufnagel The role of word structure in segmental serial ordering , 1992, Cognition.

[67]  Jenn-Yeu Chen,et al.  Syllable errors from naturalistic slips of the tongue in Mandarin Chinese , 2000 .

[68]  B. Baars The Cognitive Revolution in Psychology , 1986 .

[69]  Anne Cutler,et al.  The perfect speech error , 1988 .

[70]  W. Levelt,et al.  Word frequency effects in speech production: Retrieval of syntactic information and of phonological form , 1994 .