“…The finding that learners in our study sometimes avoided using niwhen it triggered a phonological rule is consistent with the view that learners favor paradigm uniformity, meaning that they prefer morphemes to have the same phonological form across the contexts in which they appear (Hayes, 2004;Steriade, 2000). Paradigm uniformity effects have been found in a number of artificial language experiments with adults (Kapatsinski, 2009(Kapatsinski, , 2010(Kapatsinski, , 2013McMullin & Hansson, 2019;Smolek, 2019;Smolek & Kapatsinski, 2018;Stave et al, 2013;White, 2013White, , 2014 and children (Tessier, 2012). Much of the previous research on paradigm uniformity has focused on the application of a phonological rule itself, that is, whether a rule is under-applied (alternation avoidance) or over-applied (overgeneralization) in order to make members of a paradigm more similar to one another (see Smolek, 2019 for discussion of these two paradigm uniformity effects).…”