Phonological features are often assumed to be innate (Chomsky & Halle 1968) or learned as a prerequisite for learning grammar (Drescher 2013). In this paper, I show an alternative approach: features are learned in parallel with grammar. This allows for addressing an interesting question: is it really optimal that the phonological grammar only use phonological features to refer to segmental material (Chomsky & Halle 1968), or could it be more advantageous for the grammar to refer to segmental material on more than one level of representation? The learner considered here finds that it is only optimal for the grammar to use phonological features to refer to multiple segments in the same pattern (e.g., the class of nasals), but when a p...
The phonotactics of a language concerns the well-formedness of strings of sounds as potential words ...
Linguists are increasingly turning to approaches that say that language has no phonology per se, bu...
Abstract. Phonological inventories are structured in terms of distinctive features, rather than fine...
Phonological features are often assumed to be innate (Chomsky & Halle 1968) or learned as a prer...
To what extent do complex phonological patterns require the postulation of universal mechanisms spec...
To what extent do complex phonological patterns require the postulation of universal mechanisms spec...
This thesis is that the particular properties of phonological features and their combinatorial asymm...
This paper examines implications for morpho-phonology of a model that minimizes the role of an innat...
This paper addresses two fundamental questions about the nature of formal features in phonology and ...
There are currently many competing feature theories and models of segment-internal representations. ...
Phonological patterns in languages often involve groups of sounds rather than individual sounds, whi...
This paper and the next investigate the status of feature classes like Place and Laryngeal in featur...
Anderson (2008) emphasizes that the space of possible grammars must be constrained by limits not onl...
There is a growing consensus that phonological features are not innate, but rather emerge in the cou...
The present paper provides evidence from an artificial grammar learning task that supports abstract ...
The phonotactics of a language concerns the well-formedness of strings of sounds as potential words ...
Linguists are increasingly turning to approaches that say that language has no phonology per se, bu...
Abstract. Phonological inventories are structured in terms of distinctive features, rather than fine...
Phonological features are often assumed to be innate (Chomsky & Halle 1968) or learned as a prer...
To what extent do complex phonological patterns require the postulation of universal mechanisms spec...
To what extent do complex phonological patterns require the postulation of universal mechanisms spec...
This thesis is that the particular properties of phonological features and their combinatorial asymm...
This paper examines implications for morpho-phonology of a model that minimizes the role of an innat...
This paper addresses two fundamental questions about the nature of formal features in phonology and ...
There are currently many competing feature theories and models of segment-internal representations. ...
Phonological patterns in languages often involve groups of sounds rather than individual sounds, whi...
This paper and the next investigate the status of feature classes like Place and Laryngeal in featur...
Anderson (2008) emphasizes that the space of possible grammars must be constrained by limits not onl...
There is a growing consensus that phonological features are not innate, but rather emerge in the cou...
The present paper provides evidence from an artificial grammar learning task that supports abstract ...
The phonotactics of a language concerns the well-formedness of strings of sounds as potential words ...
Linguists are increasingly turning to approaches that say that language has no phonology per se, bu...
Abstract. Phonological inventories are structured in terms of distinctive features, rather than fine...