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Phonetic effects of morphology and context. Modeling the duration of word-final S in English with naive discriminative learning
- Source :
- Journal of Linguistics, 57, 123-161, Journal of Linguistics, 57, 1, pp. 123-161
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Recent research on the acoustic realization of affixes has revealed differences between phonologically homophonous affixes, e.g. the different kinds of final [s] and [z] in English (Plag, Homann & Kunter 2017, Zimmermann 2016a). Such results are unexpected and unaccounted for in widely accepted post-Bloomfieldian item-and-arrangement models (Hockett 1954), which separate lexical and post-lexical phonology, and in models which interpret phonetic effects as consequences of different prosodic structure. This paper demonstrates that the differences in duration of English final S as a function of the morphological function it expresses (non-morphemic, plural, third person singular, genitive, genitive plural, cliticizedhas, and cliticizedis) can be approximated by considering the support for these morphological functions from the words’ sublexical and collocational properties. We estimated this support using naïve discriminative learning and replicated previous results for English vowels (Tucker, Sims & Baayen 2019), indicating that segment duration is lengthened under higher functional certainty but shortened under functional uncertainty. We discuss the implications of these results, obtained with a wide learning network that eschews representations for morphemes and exponents, for models in theoretical morphology as well as for models of lexical processing.
- Subjects :
- Linguistics and Language
Context model
business.industry
Realization (linguistics)
Phonetics
Phonology
computer.software_genre
Language and Linguistics
Language & Communication
Philosophy
Genitive case
Morpheme
Speech Production and Comprehension
Artificial intelligence
business
computer
Word (group theory)
Natural language processing
Mathematics
Plural
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00222267
- Volume :
- 57
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Linguistics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5b5aa54c911964cd09f45e53de3d2d07
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022226719000203