While most phonological transformations have been shown to be subsequential, there are tonal processes that do not belong to any subregular class, thereby making it difficult to identify a tighter bound on the complexity of phonological processes than the regular languages. This paper argues that a tighter bound obtains from examining the way transformations are computed: when derived in serial, phonological processes can be decomposed into iterated subsequential maps
In the theory of generative phonology, the phonological grammar of a language is regarded as a funct...
in the classic Lexical Phonology model of cyclicity, only lexical processes are held to be cyclic. P...
In this paper we identify strict locality as a defining computational property of the input-output m...
Phonological transformations based on finite-state transducers have received an important status sin...
This dissertation is an investigation into the nature of the syntax-phonology interface. The phenome...
This work shows that the binding patterns are computationally similar to long-distance consonant dis...
Search & Copy (S&C) is a procedural model of vowel harmony in which underspecified vowels tr...
We present a learning algorithm for local phonological processes that relies on a restriction on the...
In this paper we computationally implement four different theories for representing opaque and trans...
A growing body of research provides evidence supporting Harmonic Serialism (HS; McCarthy 2000, 2008a...
The metrical foot has a long pedigree as a theoretical device in generative phonology (Liberman &...
We demonstrate a computational restriction on iterative prosody in phonology by using logical transd...
This thesis examines certaln issues of tonal phonology within the theory of lexical phonology. Tonal...
This dissertation examines the question of how phonological alternations are learnt. In constraint-b...
Phonological patterns have been characterized as regular, and regular patterns are those that are ac...
In the theory of generative phonology, the phonological grammar of a language is regarded as a funct...
in the classic Lexical Phonology model of cyclicity, only lexical processes are held to be cyclic. P...
In this paper we identify strict locality as a defining computational property of the input-output m...
Phonological transformations based on finite-state transducers have received an important status sin...
This dissertation is an investigation into the nature of the syntax-phonology interface. The phenome...
This work shows that the binding patterns are computationally similar to long-distance consonant dis...
Search & Copy (S&C) is a procedural model of vowel harmony in which underspecified vowels tr...
We present a learning algorithm for local phonological processes that relies on a restriction on the...
In this paper we computationally implement four different theories for representing opaque and trans...
A growing body of research provides evidence supporting Harmonic Serialism (HS; McCarthy 2000, 2008a...
The metrical foot has a long pedigree as a theoretical device in generative phonology (Liberman &...
We demonstrate a computational restriction on iterative prosody in phonology by using logical transd...
This thesis examines certaln issues of tonal phonology within the theory of lexical phonology. Tonal...
This dissertation examines the question of how phonological alternations are learnt. In constraint-b...
Phonological patterns have been characterized as regular, and regular patterns are those that are ac...
In the theory of generative phonology, the phonological grammar of a language is regarded as a funct...
in the classic Lexical Phonology model of cyclicity, only lexical processes are held to be cyclic. P...
In this paper we identify strict locality as a defining computational property of the input-output m...