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Bert Vaux, Andrew Nevins
£87.00
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Alan C. L. Yu
£30.00
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Origins of Sound Change
Approaches to Phonologization
Edited by Alan C. L. Yu
352 pages
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Tables, Figures
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234x156mm
978-0-19-957374-5
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Hardback
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10 January 2013
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- Comprehensive
- Cross-disciplinary
Explanations for sound change have traditionally focused on identifying the inception of change, that is, the identification of perturbations of the speech signal, conditioned by physiological constraints on articulatory and/or auditory mechanisms, which affect the way speech sounds are analyzed by the listener. While this emphasis on identifying the nature of intrinsic variation in speech has provided important insights into the origins of widely attested cross-linguistic sound changes, the nature of phonologization - the transition from intrinsic phonetic variation to extrinsic phonological encoding - remains largely unexplored.
This volume showcases the current state of
the art in phonologization research, bringing together work by leading scholars in sound change research from different disciplinary and scholarly traditions. The authors investigate the progression of sound change from the perspectives of speech perception, speech production, phonology, sociolinguistics, language acquisition, psycholinguistics, computer science, statistics, and social and cognitive psychology. The book highlights the fruitfulness of collaborative efforts among phonologists and specialists from neighbouring disciplines in seeking unified theoretical explanations for the origins of sound patterns in language, as well as improved syntheses of synchronic and diachronic phonology.Readership:
Historical linguists and phonologists, as well as students and scholars in cognitive psychology, computer science, and linguistics generally. Phoneticians, sociolinguists, language acquisitionist, and cognitive scienists.
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Edited by Alan C. L. Yu, Associate Professor of Linguistics and the College, University of Chicago Alan C. L. Yu is Associate Professor of Linguistics and the College and the University of Chicago. He also directs the Phonology Laboratory and the Washo Documentation Project. His research focuses on phonological theory, phonetics, language typology, and language variation and change. He is the author of A Natural History of Infixation (2007, Oxford University Press) and co-editor of the Blackwell Handbook of Phonological Theory 2nd Edition (Wiley-Blackwell, 2011).
Contributors: Alan C. L. Yu, University of Chicago Andrew Garrett, University of California, Berkeley Elizabeth Hume, University of Canterbury Larry M. Hyman, University of California, Berkeley Keith Johnson, University of California, Berkeley James Kirby, University of Edinburgh Heike Lehnert-LeHouillier, University at Buffalo Frédéric Mailhot, Speech Team, Google Jeff Mielke, University of Ottawa Rebecca Morley, The Ohio State University Chandan Narayan, University of Toronto Partha Niyogi, University of Chicago Morgan Sonderegger, University
of Chicago Sam Tilsen, Cornell University
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Part I: What is Phonologization
1: Larry Hyman: Enlarging the Scope of Phonologization
2: Elizabeth Hume and Frédéric Mailhot: Certainty and Expectation in Phonologization and Language
Part II: Phonetic Considerations
3: Andrew Garrett and Keith Johnson: Phonetic Bias in Sound Change
4: Heike Lehnert-LeHouillier: From Long to Short and From Short to Long: Perceptual motivations for changes in vocalic length
5: Sam Tilsen: Inibitory Mechanisms in Speech Planning Maintain and Maximie Contrast
6: Chandan Narayan: Developmental Perspectives on phonological Typology and Sound Change
Part III: Phonological and Morphological Considerations
7: Abby Kaplan: Lexical Sensitivity to Phonetic and Phonological Pressures
8: Jeff Mielke: Phonologization and the Typology of Feature Behaviour
9: Rebecca Morley: Rapid Learning of Morphologically Conditioned Phonetics: Vowel nasalization across a boundary
Part IV: Social and Computational Dynamics
10: Alan C. L. Yu: Individual Variation in Socio-cognitive Processing and Sound Change
11: James Kirby: The Role of Probabilistic Enhancement in Phonologization
12: Frédéric Mailhot: Modelling the Emergence of Vowel Harmony Through Iterated Learning
13: Morgan Sonderegger and Partha Niyogi: Variation and Change in English Noun/Verb Pair Stress: Data, dynamical systems models, and their interaction
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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