Hi all,<div><br></div><div>My research involves patients with aphasia. I am somewhat new to CHAT/CLAN, having used other methods (i.e. QPA) in the past.</div><div><br></div><div>I'm puzzled about how mor is supposed to work with replacement forms. I can see how with a form like "gonna", it makes sense to expand it as "[: going to]" so that its morphosyntax can be analyzed accordingly. But the [: replacement] notation is also used for what seems like a fundamentally different purpose, i.e. denoting intended forms when errors are made. Lots of examples are given in the "Error Coding" chapter of the CHAT manual.</div><div><br></div><div>When I'm doing my morphosyntactic/lexical analysis, I want to treat "gonna" as "going to", but when my patients make errors, I want mor to analyze what they actually said, not what they intended to say. For instance, if a patient said "flag" instead of "kite", I would not want mor (or my subsequent analysis) to proceed as if they had said "kite", which is a low-frequency word that they probably can't produce.</div><div><br></div><div>Have other people encountered this issue, and do you have any ideas of a good way to approach it?</div><div><br></div><div>best,</div><div>Stephen</div><div><br></div>
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