Author Archives: Joseph Pater
Journal of Phonology collection available
From Geoff Nathan
As part of downsizing after retirement I am thinning my journal collection. I have a virtually complete set of the journal Phonology (originally Yearbook of Phonology). It occupies about one standard box of 8 1/2 X 11 paper supplies. Does anyone want it, or have any suggestions of what I can do with it besides putting it in recycling?
Geoff
Geoffrey S. Nathan
WSU Information Privacy Officer (Retired)
Emeritus Professor, Linguistics Program
http://blogs.wayne.edu/proftech/
geoffnathan@wayne.edu
Hussain et al. (2019) — Punjabi (Lyallpuri variety)
Save the date! 07-08 Feb, 2020. Phonological Representations: A Workshop of the Berkeley Linguistics Society.
Date: 07-Feb-2020 – 08-Feb-2020
Location: Berkeley, California, USA
Website: http://linguistics.berkeley.edu/bls/
Meeting Description
Describing the sounds of language has always been a central concern of both linguistic phonetics and theoretical phonology. The central tension between informational abstraction and phonetic concreteness is resolved in ways that differ based partly on one’s theoretical aims. In some cases phonologists use continuously valued representations to derive categorical effects, while in other cases phonologists use categorical representations to derive gradient effects. Phoneticians, psycholinguists and neuroscientists are also concerned with whether representations that are useful in describing the information structure of language sound systems are also useful in capturing facts about the cognitive implementation of phonology.
Workshop participants will represent several different attitudes toward these questions, and one of the goals of the workshop is to discuss whether these different aims are fundamentally incompatible, or whether we can we find a system of description that is successful in both accounting for information structure and for the cognition of language use.
Confirmed speakers include Bruce Hayes (UCLA), Stephanie Shih (USC), Kevin Ryan (Harvard), and Katie Drager (Hawaii).
A full call for papers will be published in Sept. 2019.
Call for Papers: Journées FLORAL-(I)PFC 2019: French in the World
been extended to cover other domains of linguistics, i.e. syntax and sociolinguistics, leading to a collaboration with the Laboratoire Ligérien de Linguistique de l’Université d’Orléans, and the creation of a research network on oral French: FLORAL (Français Langue Orale et Recherches Avancées en Linguistique/Oral French and Advanced Studies in Linguistics). PFC further focuses on interphonology and the pedagogical aspects of pronunciation through the daughter project IPFC (Interphonologie du français contemporain/ Interphonology of Contemporary French, http://cblle.tufs.ac.jp/ipfc/).
- Francophonie and phonologies in contact
- Interphonology and didactics of oral French
The abstract (1 page including title and references) must be sent by email to Helene N. Andreassen (Helene.n.andreassen@uit.no), Elissa Pustka (elissa.pustka@univie.ac.at) and Isabelle Racine (isabelle.racine@unige.ch).
Helene N. Andreassen, UiT The Arctic University of Norway
Olivier Baude, Paris Nanterre University/HUMA-NUM
Marie-Hélène Coté, University of Lausanne
Sylvain Detey, Waseda University
Julien Eychenne, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies
Elissa Pustka, University of Vienna
Isabelle Racine, University of Geneva
Call for papers: Annual Meeting on Phonology 2019
We are seeking high-quality unpublished research in all areas of theoretical, experimental, and computational phonology for presentation at the 2019 Annual Meeting on Phonology (AMP 2019), to take place October 11-13, 2019 and hosted by the Linguistics Department at the Stony Brook University. This is the seventh installment of the Annual Meetings on Phonology, following the 2013 inaugural meeting at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and subsequent meetings hosted by MIT, UBC/SFU, USC, NYU and UCSD.
This year’s conference features two workshops entitled “Advances in Computational Phonology” and “The Phonology-Syntax Interface in the World’s Languages” with associated tutorials and invited speakers. We are particularly interested in high-quality research submissions that address the themes of these workshops.
Submission Guidelines
We invite abstracts for either oral presentations or poster presentations. Abstracts must be anonymous, so please be sure to eliminate any identifying information and metadata from the document. Length is limited to a maximum of two single-spaced pages (US Letter), figures and references included. Font size should be 12-point, with margins of at least one inch (2.54cm) left on all sides. Abstracts must be submitted in .pdf file format.
Submissions are limited to three per author, with at most one submission being single-authored.
The deadline for abstract submission is Monday, June 3, 11:59pm EST (23:59 GMT-5).
Abstract submission link: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=amp2019.
Invited Speakers
- Jane Chandlee (Haverford College)
- Lauren Clemens (University at Albany)
- Taylor Miller (SUNY Oswego)
- Stephanie Shih (University of Southern California)
Contact
All questions about the conference should be emailed to amp2019@stonybrook.edu.
Publication
All presentations (in both the general and workshop sessions) are eligible for publication in the open-access on-line conference proceedings hosted by the Linguistic Society of America. Oral presentations will appear in the main Proceedings and poster presentations will appear in the Supplemental Proceedings.
CALL FOR PAPERS – Recursivity in phonology, below and above the word (RecPhon2019)
Pater 2019: Phonological typology in Optimality Theory and Formal Language Theory: Goals and future directions.
Pater, Joe. To appear 2019. Phonological typology in Optimality Theory and Formal Language Theory: Goals and future directions. In Phonology. https://works.bepress.com/joe_pater/37/
Abstract.Much recent work has studied phonological typology in terms of formal language theory (e.g. the Chomsky hierarchy). This paper considers whether Optimality Theory grammars might be constrained to generate only regular languages, and also whether the tools of formal language theory might be used for constructing phonological theories similar to those within Optimality Theory. It offers reasons to be optimistic about the first possibility, and skeptical about the second.
Nyman and Tesar 2019: Determining underlying presence in the learning of grammars that allow insertion and deletion
Nyman, Alexandra and Bruce Tesar. 2019. Determining underlying presence in the learning of grammars that allow insertion and deletion. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 4(1): 37. 1–41. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/gjgl.603
Abstract
The simultaneous learning of a phonological map from inputs to outputs and a lexicon of phonological underlying forms has been a focus of several research efforts (Jarosz 2006; Apoussidou 2007; Merchant 2008; Merchant & Tesar 2008; Tesar 2014). One of the numerous challenges is that of computational efficiency, which led to the investigation of learning with output-driven maps (Tesar 2014). Prior work on learning with output-driven maps has focused on systems in which the only disparities between inputs and outputs were segmental identity disparities (differences in the value of a feature). Inclusion of segmental insertion and deletion disparities exacerbates computational concerns, as it increases the number of possible correspondence relations between an input and an output, and makes the space of possible inputs for a word infinite due to the possible presence of an unbounded number of deleted segments. We propose an extension of that earlier work to handle phonologies that permit insertion and deletion, and evaluate the proposal by applying it to cases in Basic CV Syllable Theory (Jakobson 1962; Clements & Keyser 1983; Prince & Smolensky 2004). First, we propose that a learner represent information about the possible presence/absence of a segment in an underlying form via a presence feature. The presence feature can be set using the same inconsistency detection method that has previously been used to set other segmental features. This allows the learner to combine evidence from paradigmatically related words in a single compact representation. Second, we propose that the learner only consider for underlying forms segments that surface in at least one surface realization of the morpheme. This approach is justified by the structure of output-driven maps, and avoids the potential for an unbounded number of possibly deleted segments in an underlying form. A proof is given for the validity of the method for avoiding unbounded deletion. The resulting learner is able to learn some grammatical regularities about segmental insertion and deletion; this is shown via two manual step-by-step applications of the algorithm. Verificatory simulations for learning the entire typology of Basic CV Syllable Theory are left to work in the near future.
Call for Posters: Language and Music Workshop May 12, 2019
The UMass Amherst Department of Linguistics and the Department of Music and Dance will host a Language and Music Workshop on the afternoon of Sunday May 12th. There are five invited speakers, listed below, and we invite interested participants to submit brief abstracts for poster presentations (250 – 500 words of text) by Wednesday May 1st by using this Google form:
https://forms.gle/XCjTANMeCuxoeJAr9
We expect to be able to be very liberal in accepting posters, and so wanted the submission format to be relatively informal. If it would be more convenient to submit a .pdf, please fill out the form with names and affiliations, and e-mail the .pdf to pater@umass.edu.
Updates about the workshop can be found here: https://websites.umass.edu/linguist/language-and-music-workshop-may-12-2019/
Speakers
Mara Breen – Mount Holyoke College
The Cat in the Hat: Musical and linguistic metric structure realization in child-directed poetry
François Dell – Centre de Recherches Linguistiques sur l’Asie Orientale (CRLAO) CNRS / EHESS, Paris
Delivery design: towards a typology
Bob Ladd – University of Edinburgh
Two problems in theories of tone-melody matching
Laura McPherson – Dartmouth College
Tonal adaptation across musical modality: A comparison of Sambla vocal music and speech surrogates
Christopher White – University of Massachusetts Amherst
Analogies with Language in Machine-learned Musical Grammars