Bidirectional optimality theory /
Bidirectional Optimality Theory (BiOT) emerged at the turn of the millennium as a fusion of Radical Pragmatics and Optimality Theoretic Semantics. It stirred a wealth of new research in the pragmatics-semantics interface and heavily influenced e.g. the development of evolutionary and game theoretic...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Pub. Co.,
2011.
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Colección: | Linguistik aktuell ;
Bd. 180. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Bidirectional Optimality Theory; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Bidirectional Optimality Theory; 1. Optimality Theory; 2. Bidirectional Optimality Theory; 3. Stochastic Optimality Theory; 4. Games and Bidirectional Optimality Theory; 5. Overview; References; A programme for bidirectional phonology and phonetics and their acquisition and evolution; 1. Phonological representations: Underlying and Surface Form; 1.1 The relation between underlying form and surface form; 1.2 The process of merely-phonological production.
- 1.3 The process of merely-phonological comprehension1.4 Merely-phonological acquisition; 1.5 Merely-phonological evolution; 1.6 What is wrong with merely-phonological grammars?; 2. Phonetic representations: Auditory and Articulatory Form; 2.1 The relation between Auditory Form and Articulatory form; 2.2 The process of merely-phonetic articulation; 2.3 The processes of merely-phonetic audition; 2.4 Merely-phonetic acquisition; 2.5 Merely-phonetic evolution; 3. The phonology-phonetics interface; 3.1 The relation between Surface Form and Auditory Form; 3.2 The process of prelexical perception.
- 3.3 Unidirectional acquisition of prelexical perception3.4 The process of prototype selection; 3.5 Acquisition of prototype selection?; 3.6 The evolution of the phonology-phonetics interface; 3.7 Is this how the phonology-phonetics interface works?; 4. The three 'low' representations: Articulatory Form
- Auditory Form
- Surface Form; 4.1 The process of phonetic production; 4.2 The acquisition of phonetic knowledge; 4.3 The evolution of phonetic implementation; 4.4 Is this how the phonetic representations are connected to the phonology?
- 5. The three 'middle' representations: Auditory Form
- Surface Form
- Underlying Form5.1 The serial edition of the process of phonetic-phonological comprehension; 5.2 The parallel edition of the process of phonetic-phonological comprehension; 6. The quadruplet Underlying
- Surface
- Auditory
- Articulatory; 6.1 The process of phonological-phonetic production; 6.2 The acquisition of phonological-phonetic production; 7. Semantic representations; 8. The phonology-semantics interface: The lexicon; 8.1 Relations; 8.2 The process of lexical retrieval in production.
- 8.3 The process of the access of meaning in comprehension8.4 The acquisition of lexical relations; 9. The triplet Morphemes
- Underlying Form
- Surface Form; 9.1 The influence of Morphemes (and Context) on word recognition; 9.2 Acquisition; 10. Discussion; 10.1 The larger picture: Whole-language simulations; 10.2 The assumptions: Naïve bidirectionality and multi-level parallelism; References; A note on the emergence of subject salience; 1. Introduction: Salience and subjecthood; 2. Centering Theory's Rule 1; 3. Bidirectional Optimality Theory; 4. Beaver's COT; 5. Evolving subject salience.