The commentaries provide a multitude of perspectives on the
theory of lexical access presented in our target article. We respond,
on the one hand, to criticisms that concern the embeddings of our
model in the larger theoretical frameworks of human performance
and of a speaker's multiword sentence and discourse generation.
These embeddings, we argue, are either already there or naturally
forgeable. On the other hand, we reply to a host of theory-internal
issues concerning the abstract properties of our feedforward spreading
activation model, which functions without the usual cascading,
feedback, and inhibitory connections. These issues also concern
the concrete stratification in terms of lexical concepts, syntactic
lemmas, and morphophonology. Our response stresses the parsimony
of our modeling in the light of its substantial empirical coverage.
We elaborate its usefulness for neuroimaging and aphasiology and
suggest further cross-linguistic extensions of the model.