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Language and Cognitive Processes

Volume 25, Issue 3, 2010

Listening to yourself is like listening to others: External, but not internal, verbal self-monitoring is based on speech perception

Listening to yourself is like listening to others: External, but not internal, verbal self-monitoring is based on speech perception

DOI:
10.1080/01690960903046926
Falk Huettiga* & Robert J. Hartsuikerb

pages 347-374

Available online: 23 Jul 2009

Abstract

Theories of verbal self-monitoring generally assume an internal (pre-articulatory) monitoring channel, but there is debate about whether this channel relies on speech perception or on production-internal mechanisms. Perception-based theories predict that listening to one's own inner speech has similar behavioural consequences as listening to someone else's speech. Our experiment therefore registered eye-movements while speakers named objects accompanied by phonologically related or unrelated written words. The data showed that listening to one's own speech drives eye-movements to phonologically related words, just as listening to someone else's speech does in perception experiments. The time-course of these eye-movements was very similar to that in other-perception (starting 300 ms post-articulation), which demonstrates that these eye-movements were driven by the perception of overt speech, not inner speech. We conclude that external, but not internal monitoring, is based on speech perception.

Keywords

 

Details

  • Available online: 23 Jul 2009

Author affiliations

  • a Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, the Netherlands
  • b Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium

Librarians

Taylor & Francis Group