Event

Caitlin Richter will be defending their dissertation on Wednesday July 14, at 1pm EDT. The defense is open to the public and will take place on Zoom.

 

More information and the abstract are below.

 

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Supervisors: Charles Yang and Don Ringe

Committee: Dan Swingley

Date & Time: Wednesday, July 14th, 1pm EDT

 

Title: Alternation-sensitive phoneme learning: implications for children’s development and language change

 

Abstract: This dissertation develops a cognitive model describing when children learn to group distinct sound segments (allophones) into abstract equivalence classes (phonemes). The allophones an individual acquires are arbitrary and determined by their particular input, yet intricately involved in language cognition once learned. The acquisition model characterises the role of surface segment alternations in children's input by using the Tolerance Principle (Yang 2016) to evaluate the cognitive cost of possible phoneme inventory structures iteratively as a child’s vocabulary grows. The model traces the emergence of abstract representations from concrete speech stimuli, starting from a default representation where underlying contrasts simply mirror surface-segment contrasts (Invariant Transparency Hypothesis, Ringe & Eska 2013).

 

A longitudinal corpus study of four children's alveolar stop and flap productions establishes that English medial flap allophony follows a U-shaped acquisition course, which is characteristic of learning linguistic rules or generalisations. The cognitive model is validated by accurately predicting the timing of changes in each child's productions, which signal allophone acquisition. A second case study models the historical process of secondary split in Menominee mid and high back vowels. The acquisition model serves as an independently motivated quantitative test for the occurrence of phonemic split, providing an alternative to traditional reliance on linguists' case-specific subjective judgements about when it might occur. The third case study examines the phonemic status of the velar nasal in German, showing how the acquisition model can discriminate between tolerable grammars and the subset of tolerable grammars that are learnable, with implications for the relationship between formal language description and psychological representation. This dissertation's approach synthesises insights from computational modelling, naturalistic corpus data, historical linguistics, and experimental research on child language acquisition.