wordcommitment
Wordcommitment is a theoretical construct in linguistics and psycholinguistics describing the tendency of speakers to fix, or commit to, a particular lexical item during the planning of an utterance. The concept is used to explain how early decisions about which word form to choose can influence subsequent language production, by reducing competition among alternative lemmas and forms and guiding selection toward a coherent realization.
In commonly cited models, wordcommitment occurs after conceptualization and before articulation, narrowing the set of candidate
Evidence for wordcommitment comes from psycholinguistic experiments and techniques such as priming, self-paced reading, eye-tracking, and
Applications of the concept appear in models of natural language generation, second-language instruction, and computational speech
Related concepts include lexical entrainment, incremental planning, and lexical access in production models. See also lexical