摘要:In order to speak fluently and without error, we constantly monitor ourselves. Traditional modelsof monitoring within speech production have hypothesized that we send output from various stagesof production through the comprehension systems (i.e., the perceptual loop; Levelt, 1983). Recentevidence, however, suggests that signals within the production system itself may serve as cues tomonitoring. One such cue is response conflict, a situation that arises when two responses aresimultaneously active prior to responding. Response conflict monitoring has been well-studiedoutside of language, and replicable behavioral and physiological signatures of this process havebeen established (see Yeung, Botvinick, & Cohen 2004). Here I present results from bilingual picturenaming and from an EEG study of the tongue twister task demonstrating that these signatures arealso present in language production.