The most familiar architecture for Optimality Theory is a fully parallel one, meaning that all possible ultimate outputs are contemplated at once (Prince and Smolensky 1993: 79). But Prince and Smolensky also briefly entertain a serial architecture for OT, called Harmonic Serialism. The idea is that Gen Eval iterates, sending the output of Eval back into Gen as a new input. This loop continues until the derivation converges (i.e., until Eval returns the same form as the input to Gen). There are clear resemblances between this approach and theories based on notions like derivational economy (e.g., Chomsky 1995). There is also a connection with serial rule-based phonology. In the implementation of Harmonic Serialism that Prince and Smolensk...