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Lexical Selection in Production

Lexical selection is the process by which a speaker chooses the right word for an intended meaning and retrieves its grammatical and phonological form.

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Definition

The retrieval and selection of words during production, including access to a word's syntactic (lemma) and phonological (lexeme) properties.

Scope

This topic covers how concepts activate candidate words, how a single lemma is selected from among competitors, and the time course from meaning to grammatical form to sound, as studied with picture naming and picture-word interference. It describes the retrieval architecture and the evidence for distinct stages.

Core questions

  • How is one word selected from among semantically related competitors?
  • Are grammatical (lemma) and phonological (lexeme) information accessed in separate stages?
  • Is selection competitive, with competitors slowing retrieval?

Key concepts

  • lemma
  • lexeme
  • lexical competition
  • picture-word interference
  • semantic interference

Key theories

Two-stage lemma/lexeme access
Levelt and colleagues' account in which a lemma (carrying meaning and syntax) is selected before its phonological form is retrieved, supported by picture-word interference timing.
Interactive spreading-activation selection
Dell's model in which semantic, lexical, and phonological levels interact and feedback shapes selection, accounting for mixed and phonological error patterns.

History

Picture-word interference studies in the late 1980s and 1990s, interpreted within Levelt's framework, established evidence for staged lemma-then-lexeme access, contrasting with Dell's interactive 1986 model.

Debates

Competitive versus non-competitive selection
Whether lexical selection is a competitive process in which co-activated words slow retrieval, or whether selection is non-competitive and interference arises elsewhere.

Key figures

  • Willem Levelt
  • Gary Dell
  • Herbert Schriefers
  • Antje Meyer

Related topics

Seminal works

  • leveltroelofsmeyer1999
  • dell1986
  • schriefers1990

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between a lemma and a lexeme?
A lemma is the abstract, meaning- and syntax-bearing representation of a word, while the lexeme is its phonological form; many production models hold these are retrieved in separate stages.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts