Effects of morphological structure on phonetic detail present us with
two challenges. The empirical challenge is that some predictors have
produced inconsistent effects. The theoretical challenge is that it is
unclear where morpho-phonetic effects originate from. Do speakers
decompose words into morphemes? Or can such effects also originate
from non-decompositional structure? This book investigates the
durational properties of English derived words in four large-scale
corpus studies. In the decompositional perspective, durations are
modeled as a function of frequency and segmentability, prosodic
structure, and affix informativeness. In the non-decompositional
perspective, durations are modeled with predictors derived from linear
discriminative learning networks. Results show that the
decompositional predictors are far less reliable than previously
thought. Meanwhile, some non-decompositional predictors model
durations successfully. Discriminative learning is shown to be a
promising alternative for modeling speech production. However, the
book also demonstrates that many investigated predictors are
conceptually interrelated. It ultimately cautions against taking the
metaphors we use to describe these predictors as final explanations.
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Tracing Morphology in Speech Production
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783111025780
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
De Gruyter
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter