According to the P-Map, a phonological mapping is less faithful to the extent that there is more perceptual distance between its input and output. Although this idea is attractive, it cannot be implemented in the standard parallel version of Optimality Theory. This note explains why and shows how a derivational version of OT, Harmonic Serialism, can solve this problem
A growing body of research provides evidence supporting Harmonic Serialism (HS; McCarthy 2000, 2008a...
Abstract: This chapter claims that phonology is like syntax in that the input consists of lexical it...
The concept of an output-driven map formally characterizes an intuitive notion about phonology: that...
According to the P-Map, a phonological mapping is less faithful to the extent that there is more per...
are perceptually grounded: the faithfulness of a phonological mapping is directly proportional to th...
The most familiar architecture for Optimality Theory is a fully parallel one, meaning that all poss...
The most familiar architecture for Optimality Theory is a fully parallel one, meaning that "all poss...
In Optimality Theory, phonological patterns are accounted for with output constraints ranked in a hi...
Pathologies arise in parallel OT when a positional faithfulness constraint and a conflicting markedn...
When a medial consonant cluster is simplified by deletion or place assimilation, the first consonant...
Revised December 2009 This paper is a shorter (and probably better) version of Harmony in Harmonic ...
In Harmonic Serialism, place assimilation can be modeled as taking one deriva- tional step or two. T...
An approach to reduplication in parallel Optimality Theory predicts the possibility of lookahead eff...
Many languages respect the generalization that some or all unstressed vowels are deleted. This gener...
In standard Optimality Theory, faithfulness constraints are defined in terms of an input-output corr...
A growing body of research provides evidence supporting Harmonic Serialism (HS; McCarthy 2000, 2008a...
Abstract: This chapter claims that phonology is like syntax in that the input consists of lexical it...
The concept of an output-driven map formally characterizes an intuitive notion about phonology: that...
According to the P-Map, a phonological mapping is less faithful to the extent that there is more per...
are perceptually grounded: the faithfulness of a phonological mapping is directly proportional to th...
The most familiar architecture for Optimality Theory is a fully parallel one, meaning that all poss...
The most familiar architecture for Optimality Theory is a fully parallel one, meaning that "all poss...
In Optimality Theory, phonological patterns are accounted for with output constraints ranked in a hi...
Pathologies arise in parallel OT when a positional faithfulness constraint and a conflicting markedn...
When a medial consonant cluster is simplified by deletion or place assimilation, the first consonant...
Revised December 2009 This paper is a shorter (and probably better) version of Harmony in Harmonic ...
In Harmonic Serialism, place assimilation can be modeled as taking one deriva- tional step or two. T...
An approach to reduplication in parallel Optimality Theory predicts the possibility of lookahead eff...
Many languages respect the generalization that some or all unstressed vowels are deleted. This gener...
In standard Optimality Theory, faithfulness constraints are defined in terms of an input-output corr...
A growing body of research provides evidence supporting Harmonic Serialism (HS; McCarthy 2000, 2008a...
Abstract: This chapter claims that phonology is like syntax in that the input consists of lexical it...
The concept of an output-driven map formally characterizes an intuitive notion about phonology: that...