Production, Perception and Emergent Phonotactic Patterns: A Case of Contrastive Palatalization

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Psychology Press, 2002 - Foreign Language Study - 256 pages

First Published in 2002. Production, Perception and Phontactic Patterns presents the first experimental study of articulatory dynamics of Russian and of secondary articulents in general, with a special focus on the nature of positional markedness scales, one of the key concepts in the current phonological theory (Optimality Theory). Through a series of experiments the author questions the traditional assumption that positional markedness scales are directly encoded in Universal Grammar and provides an alternative account based on gestural recoverability. This study combines a sophisticated and in-depth analysis of language-particular phonetic detail with wide cross-linguistic generalisations and contributes to the increasingly influential body of research that investigates phonetic factors in the search for explanations of phonological universals.

 

Contents

PREFACE
5
FOUNDATIONS
5
PHONOTACTIC PATTERNS OF PALATALIZATION
17
ASYMMETRIES IN PRODUCTION
57
ASYMMETRIES IN PERCEPTION
115
EMERGENT PHONOTACTIC PATTERNS
183
APPENDIX
229
BIBLIOGRAPHY
239
INDEX
251
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Page 5 - A traditional OT learner constructs a phonological grammar by ranking markedness and faithfulness constraints based on positive evidence from the lexicon s/he has acquired (Tesar & Smolensky 1993).

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