Reference Entry10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198845003.013.14
Phonological Abstraction in The Mental Lexicon
Eric Baković,Jeffrey Heinz,Jonathan Rawski +2 more
- 07 Jan 2022
pp 10-32
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TL;DR: The authors examine the nature of the long-term memory representation of the pronunciations of words and examine how abstract these representations are vis à vis the physical manifestation of words, both as gestures and as physical percepts.
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Abstract: In this chapter, we examine the nature of the long-term memory representation of the pronunciations of words. A fundamental question concerns how abstract these representations are vis à vis the physical manifestation of words, both as gestures and as physical percepts. We consider this question and related issues within the traditions of linguistic cognition and generative phonology. We first explore the general nature of abstraction, and then review the arguments in generative phonology for positing that the units of speech stored in long-term memory (so called ‘underlying forms’) abstract away from many phonetic details. Motivations for concepts such as phonemes and distinctive phonological features are given. We then visit the open question regarding how abstract underlying forms may be allowed to be. We conclude by highlighting the contributions that evidence from neuroscience and sign language linguistics brings to these issues of phonological abstraction in the mental lexicon.
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Citations
No lexical–prelexical feedback during speech perception or: Is it time to stop playing those Christmas tapes?
TL;DR: Magnuson et al. as discussed by the authors found that the direction of the compensation effect depended on whether practice stimuli were words or nonwords, and that there was no lexically mediated compensation.
References
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Lexical Meaning in Context: A Web of Words
Nicholas Asher
- 29 Apr 2011
TL;DR: The purpose of this monograph is to introduce the reader to the concept of type presuppositions and to discuss their application in the context of type-composition logic.
Re-examining the brain regions crucial for orchestrating speech articulation.
Argye E. Hillis,Melissa Work,Peter B. Barker,Michael A. Jacobs,Elisabeth L. Breese,Kristin Maurer +5 more
TL;DR: In patients with and without insular lesions, apraxia of speech was associated with structural damage or low blood flow in left posterior inferior frontal gyrus, and this results illustrate a potential limitation of lesion overlap studies, and illustrate an alternative method for identifying brain-behaviour relationships.
The Lexicon-Syntax Parameter: reflexivization and other arity operations
Tanya Reinhart,Tal Siloni +1 more
TL;DR: This article showed that a single parameter straightforwardly derives the variation in the array of reflexive verbs and that the parameter is applicable only if the grammar includes an active lexicon, which allows the application of derivational operations.
•Book
Logic in Grammar: Polarity, Free Choice, and Intervention
Gennaro Chierchia
- 15 Sep 2013
TL;DR: In this article, the Spontaneous Logicality of Language is discussed and Scalar Implicatures at the Interface between Pragmatics and Syntax are discussed. But they do not discuss the relationship between the two.
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