Reading list
Phonology II ·
Fall 2004
Course readings are listed here in alphabetical
order for each unit.
See the daily syllabus for
chronological reading assignments.
Unit 1:
On the phonetics-phonology interface in OT
-
Blevins, Juliette, and Andrew Garrett. 2004.
The evolution of metathesis. In Bruce Hayes, Robert Kirchner, and Donca
Steriade, eds., Phonetically Based Phonology.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 117-156.
Available online --
download
here
-
Hallé, Pierre A., Juan Segui, Uli Frauenfelder, and
Christine Meunier. 1998.
Processing of illegal consonant clusters: A case of perceptual
assimilation? Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Human Perception and Performance 24 (2): 592-608.
Available online through
UNC Libraries
-
Hayes, Bruce. 1999.
Phonetically driven phonology: The role of Optimality Theory and
inductive grounding. In Michael Darnell et al., eds.,
Functionalism and
Formalism in Linguistics, vol. 1: General Papers. Amsterdam:
Benjamins, 243-85.
Pre-print version available as ROA-158 [1996] --
download here
-
Hyman, Larry M. 2001.
On the limits of phonetic determinism in phonology:
*NC revisted. In Elizabeth Hume and Keith Johnson, eds.,
The Role of Speech Perception in Phonology.
New York: Academic Press, 141-185.
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-
Kirchner, Robert. 2000.
Geminate inalterability and lenition. Language 76(1):
509-545.
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-
Moreton, Elliott, and Shigeaki Amano. 1999.
Phonotactics in the perception of Japanese vowel length: Evidence for
long-distance dependencies. Proceedings of the 6th European
Conference on Speech Communication and Technology, Budapest.
Available online --
download
here
-
Pater, Joe. 1999.
Austronesian nasal substitution and other NC effects.
In René Kager, Harry van der Hulst, and Wim Zonneveld, eds.,
The Prosody-Morphology Interface. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 310-343.
Pre-print version available as ROA-160 [1996] --
download here
-
Smith, Jennifer L. 2004.
(Manuscript.)
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-
Steriade, Donca. 2001a.
Directional asymmetries in place assimilation: a perceptual account.
In Elizabeth Hume and Keith Johnson, eds.,
The Role of Speech Perception in Phonology.
San Diego: Academic Press, 219-250.
Pre-print version available online --
download
here [NOTE: Online version has phonetics font problems.
A hard copy was distributed in class on Tu 9/7.]
-
Steriade, Donca. 2001b.
The phonology of perceptibility effects: The P-map and its
consequences for constraint organization. Ms., UCLA.
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-
Zhang, Jie. 2004.
The role of contrast-specific and language-specific phonetics in contour
tone distribution. In Bruce Hayes, Robert Kirchner, and Donca Steriade,
eds., Phonetically Based Phonology. Cambridge: Cambridge
University
Press, 157-190.
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Unit 2:
The phonetics-phonology interface and learning
-
Davidson, Lisa. 2004.
Phonotactics as coordination: Evidence from non-native cluster
production. Ms., New York University.
Available online --
download here
-
Grijzenhout, Janet, and Bertus van Rooy. 2001.
Second language phonology: Acquisition through gradual constraint
demotion. Arbeiten des Sonderforschungsbereichs 282
(Düsseldorf-Wuppertal-Köln), no. 119.
Available online --
download here
-
Maye, Jessica, Janet Werker, and LouAnn Gerken. 2002.
Infant sensitivity to distributional information can affect phonetic
discrimination. Cognition 82(3): B101-B111.
Available online --
download here
-
Maye, Jessica, and Daniel Weiss. 2003.
Statistical cues facilitate infants' discrimination of difficult
phonetic contrasts. Proceedings of the 27th Annual Boston University
Conference on Language Development, 508-518.
Available online --
download here
-
Mielke, Jeff. 2003.
The interplay of speech perception and phonology:
Experimental evidence from Turkish. Phonetica 60: 208-229.
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-
Pater, Joe. 2004.
Bridging the gap between receptive and productive development with
minimally violable constraints. In René Kager, Joe Pater, and Wim
Zonneveld, eds., Constraints in Phonological Acquisition.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 219-244.
Pre-print version available online --
download here
-
Peperkamp, Sharon, and Emmanuel Dupoux. 2003.
Reinterpreting loanword adaptations: The role of perception.
Proceedings of the 15th International Congress of Phonetic
Sciences, 367-370.
Available online --
download here
-
Yip, Moira. 2002.
Perceptual influences in Cantonese loanword phonology.
Journal of the Phonetic Society of Japan 6(1): 4-21.
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Unit 3:
Some formal responses to the "Too-Many-Solutions
problem"
-
Beckman, Jill. 2004.
The case for local conjunction: Evidence from Fyem.
In Gina Garding and Mimu Tsujimura, eds.,
Proceedings of WCCFL 22. Somerville, Mass:
Cascadilla Press, 56-69.
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for more information
-
Gouskova, Maria. 2003.
Economy of Representation in OT. Handout from presentation
at WCCFL 22, University of California, San Diego.
Available online --
download here
-
McCarthy, John. 2003.
Comparative markedness. Theoretical Linguistics 29: 1-51.
Available online --
download
here
-
Padgett, Jaye. 2002.
Constraint conjunction versus grounded constraint subhierarchies in
Optimality Theory. Ms., UCSC.
Available online --
download here
This page last revised September 28, 2004.
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