This paper shows that the properties of locality observed for patterns of long-distance consonant agreement and disagreement belong to a well-defined and relatively simple class of subregular formal languages (stringsets) called the Tier-based Strictly 2-Local languages, and argues that analyzing them as such has desirable theoretical implications. Specifically, treating the two elements of a long-distance dependency as adjacent segments on the computationally defined notion of a tier allows for a unified account of locality that necessarily extends to the cross-linguistically variable behavior of neutral segments (transparency and blocking). This result is significant in light of the long-standing and persistent problems that long-distance...
The cross-linguistic under-representation of adjacent consonants sharing a place of articulation wit...
In this paper, we use harmony systems with multiple feature spreadings as a litmus test for the poss...
Most contemporary work assumes that dissimilation is motivated by featural co-occurrence constraints...
This paper shows that the properties of locality observed for patterns of long-distance consonant ag...
An important property of any language’s sound system is its phonotactics—the unique way in which it ...
This paper reports on a series of artificial grammar learning experiments focused on locality relati...
This work shows that the binding patterns are computationally similar to long-distance consonant dis...
Recent research in computational linguistics suggests that unbounded dependencies in phonotactics, m...
This article develops an explicit procedural model of vowel harmony, and takes steps toward finding ...
This article develops an explicit procedural model of vowel harmony, and takes steps toward finding ...
Hansson (2001), Rose & Walker (2004), and Walker (2000a, 2000b) have recently proposed that long-dis...
Long-distance nasal agreement (LDNA) is a process where consonants appear to agree in nasality acros...
Many--or perhaps all--long-distance assimilatory and dissimilatory phonological processes produce le...
This study seeks to account for vowel shortening and the distribution of vowel length within a const...
In this dissertation, I argue for a theory of long-distance consonant dissimilation based on Surface...
The cross-linguistic under-representation of adjacent consonants sharing a place of articulation wit...
In this paper, we use harmony systems with multiple feature spreadings as a litmus test for the poss...
Most contemporary work assumes that dissimilation is motivated by featural co-occurrence constraints...
This paper shows that the properties of locality observed for patterns of long-distance consonant ag...
An important property of any language’s sound system is its phonotactics—the unique way in which it ...
This paper reports on a series of artificial grammar learning experiments focused on locality relati...
This work shows that the binding patterns are computationally similar to long-distance consonant dis...
Recent research in computational linguistics suggests that unbounded dependencies in phonotactics, m...
This article develops an explicit procedural model of vowel harmony, and takes steps toward finding ...
This article develops an explicit procedural model of vowel harmony, and takes steps toward finding ...
Hansson (2001), Rose & Walker (2004), and Walker (2000a, 2000b) have recently proposed that long-dis...
Long-distance nasal agreement (LDNA) is a process where consonants appear to agree in nasality acros...
Many--or perhaps all--long-distance assimilatory and dissimilatory phonological processes produce le...
This study seeks to account for vowel shortening and the distribution of vowel length within a const...
In this dissertation, I argue for a theory of long-distance consonant dissimilation based on Surface...
The cross-linguistic under-representation of adjacent consonants sharing a place of articulation wit...
In this paper, we use harmony systems with multiple feature spreadings as a litmus test for the poss...
Most contemporary work assumes that dissimilation is motivated by featural co-occurrence constraints...