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Cumulative faithfulness effects: Opaque or transparent?
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In: IULC Working Papers; Vol 8 No 2 (2008): Phonological Opacity Effects in Optimality Theory ; 1524-2110 (2018)
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An opacity-tolerant conspiracy in phonological acquisition
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In: IULC Working Papers; Vol 8 No 2 (2008): Phonological Opacity Effects in Optimality Theory ; 1524-2110 (2018)
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The Effect of Residual Acoustic Hearing and Adaptation to Uncertainty on Speech Perception in Cochlear Implant Users: Evidence from Eye-Tracking
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Editors’ Note
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In: Proceedings of the Annual Meetings on Phonology; Proceedings of the 2015 Annual Meeting on Phonology ; 2377-3324 (2016)
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English Spoken by Immigrant Children: Learning a Second Language Phonology in Early Childhood
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In: Tessier, Anne-Michelle (2014)
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The process of spoken word recognition in the face of signal degradation
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Cumulative faithfulness effects in phonology ...
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Abstract:
One of the hallmarks of optimality theory (OT) is strict domination: multiple low-ranked constraint violations cannot gang up on a higher-ranked constraint. However, such cumulative interactions have been shown to occur. This thesis examines the subset of cumulative interactions called cumulative faithfulness effects (CFEs). CFEs occur when a single unfaithful mapping is allowed in a word, but multiple unfaithful mappings are not. In languages with CFEs, violations of multiple lower-ranked faithfulness constraints gang up on a single higher-ranked constraint to eliminate outputs that are unfaithful in multiple ways, while allowing singly-unfaithful outputs to survive. The key generalization is that for languages in which multiple repair processes could be used to repair a marked element, the least unfaithful repair process is chosen. The fact that these effects are attested in a variety of languages and language domains presents a problem for OT, which cannot account for them. Moreover, CFEs produce ...
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URL: https://rucore.libraries.rutgers.edu/rutgers-lib/37834/ https://dx.doi.org/10.7282/t3ff3r8f
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