Derivational Phonology and Optimality Phonology: Formal Comparison and Synthesis

This thesis conducts a formal comparison of Optimality Theoretic phonology with its predecessor, Rule-based Derivational phonology. This is done in three studies comparing (i) rule operations and Faithfulness constraint violations, (ii) serial rule interaction and hierarchical constraint interaction...

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Main Author: Norton, Russell James
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Language:unknown
Published: No Publisher Supplied 2003
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.7282/t39k492w
https://rucore.libraries.rutgers.edu/rutgers-lib/38428/
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spelling ftdatacite:10.7282/t39k492w 2023-05-15T15:54:18+02:00 Derivational Phonology and Optimality Phonology: Formal Comparison and Synthesis Norton, Russell James 2003 https://dx.doi.org/10.7282/t39k492w https://rucore.libraries.rutgers.edu/rutgers-lib/38428/ unknown No Publisher Supplied Text article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2003 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.7282/t39k492w 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z This thesis conducts a formal comparison of Optimality Theoretic phonology with its predecessor, Rule-based Derivational phonology. This is done in three studies comparing (i) rule operations and Faithfulness constraint violations, (ii) serial rule interaction and hierarchical constraint interaction, and (iii) derivational sequences and harmony scales. In each, the extent of the correlation is demonstrated, and empirical implications of their differences drawn out. Together, the studies demonstrate that there is no case in which the two frameworks mimic each other at all three points at once: the "Duke of York gambit", where one rule is reversed by another, is the one case where rule ordering and constraint ranking converge, yet the complexity of this composite mapping demonstrably exceeds that of the input-output mappings of Optimality Theory. It is also argued that the Duke of York mapping is generally unexplanatory, and that its availability falsely predicts that a vowel inventory may be reduced to one in some contexts by deletion and then insertion. The failure of this prediction is illustrated from Yokuts, Chukchee and Lardil. A synthesis of derivational and optimality phonology is then presented in which constraints accumulate one by one (Constraint Cumulation Theory, CCT). This successfully describes patterns of overapplication, mutual interdependence, and default, each of which was previously captured in one of the systems but not replicated in the other. It also automatically excludes Duke of York derivations except for some attested subtypes. The way the model handles overapplication and underapplication leads to the further prediction that neutralisation and elision processes are transparent except when neutralisation occurs as part of a stability effect – a result which draws on the resources of contemporary phonology to resolve the 'unmarked rule ordering' problem from the 1970s, and reinforces the traditional distinctions of neutralisation vs. conditioned variation, and elision vs. epenthesis. Text Chukchee DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
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description This thesis conducts a formal comparison of Optimality Theoretic phonology with its predecessor, Rule-based Derivational phonology. This is done in three studies comparing (i) rule operations and Faithfulness constraint violations, (ii) serial rule interaction and hierarchical constraint interaction, and (iii) derivational sequences and harmony scales. In each, the extent of the correlation is demonstrated, and empirical implications of their differences drawn out. Together, the studies demonstrate that there is no case in which the two frameworks mimic each other at all three points at once: the "Duke of York gambit", where one rule is reversed by another, is the one case where rule ordering and constraint ranking converge, yet the complexity of this composite mapping demonstrably exceeds that of the input-output mappings of Optimality Theory. It is also argued that the Duke of York mapping is generally unexplanatory, and that its availability falsely predicts that a vowel inventory may be reduced to one in some contexts by deletion and then insertion. The failure of this prediction is illustrated from Yokuts, Chukchee and Lardil. A synthesis of derivational and optimality phonology is then presented in which constraints accumulate one by one (Constraint Cumulation Theory, CCT). This successfully describes patterns of overapplication, mutual interdependence, and default, each of which was previously captured in one of the systems but not replicated in the other. It also automatically excludes Duke of York derivations except for some attested subtypes. The way the model handles overapplication and underapplication leads to the further prediction that neutralisation and elision processes are transparent except when neutralisation occurs as part of a stability effect – a result which draws on the resources of contemporary phonology to resolve the 'unmarked rule ordering' problem from the 1970s, and reinforces the traditional distinctions of neutralisation vs. conditioned variation, and elision vs. epenthesis.
format Text
author Norton, Russell James
spellingShingle Norton, Russell James
Derivational Phonology and Optimality Phonology: Formal Comparison and Synthesis
author_facet Norton, Russell James
author_sort Norton, Russell James
title Derivational Phonology and Optimality Phonology: Formal Comparison and Synthesis
title_short Derivational Phonology and Optimality Phonology: Formal Comparison and Synthesis
title_full Derivational Phonology and Optimality Phonology: Formal Comparison and Synthesis
title_fullStr Derivational Phonology and Optimality Phonology: Formal Comparison and Synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Derivational Phonology and Optimality Phonology: Formal Comparison and Synthesis
title_sort derivational phonology and optimality phonology: formal comparison and synthesis
publisher No Publisher Supplied
publishDate 2003
url https://dx.doi.org/10.7282/t39k492w
https://rucore.libraries.rutgers.edu/rutgers-lib/38428/
genre Chukchee
genre_facet Chukchee
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7282/t39k492w
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