Linguistics 219: Phonological Theory III
as taught by
Bruce Hayes
Spring 2020 Spring 2018 | ![]() Maybe the work we are doing now will be remembered in 2500 years but probably not. |
This is the third course of the UCLA graduate sequence in phonological theory. As such it is the most open-ended, directed to helping you find research topics as well as commanding the research literature. See List of Topics at end of syllabus for what I hope to cover.
2020
I used the UCLA "CCLE" facility for the 2020 offering of the course. However, you can download the syllabus here, and complete set of lecture handouts here.
2018
Week 1
Monday 4/2/2018
Lecture 1: Goals; Maxent I
Required reading: Bruce Hayes and Zsuzsa Londe (2006) "Stochastic phonological knowledge: the case of Hungarian vowel harmony". Phonology 23:59-104.
Optional reading (more on maxent mechanics): Bruce Hayes and Colin Wilson (2008).
A maximum entropy model
of phonotactics and phonotactic learning. Linguistic Inquiry
39, 379-440.
Wednesday 4/4/2018
Lecture 2: Interpreting Results; Consonant Cluster Analysis; The Framework
Bazaar
Reading: Kie Zuraw and Bruce Hayes (2017) Intersecting constraint families: an argument for Harmonic Grammar. Language 93:497-548
First assignment is due April 16 in class. Feel free to consult me with queries. Here is a spreadsheet with my own efforts on Warlpiri clusters.
Week 2
Monday 4/9/2018
Lecture 3: More on Frameworks; Bias I
Reading: Michael Becker, Andrew Nevins, and Jonathan Levine (2012) Asymmetries in generalizing alternations to and from initial syllables. Language 88:2, pp. 231–268.
Wednesday 4/11/2018
Lecture 4: Bias II; model evaluation (Wilson and Obdeyn 2009)
Reading: Colin Wilson and Marieke Obdeyn (2009) Simplifying subsidiary theory: statistical evidence from Arabic, Muna, Shona, and Wargamay
Week 3
Monday 4/16/2018
Lecture 5: Model evaluation II; Knobs
Reading: Andries W. Coetzee and Shigeto Kawahara (2013) Frequency biases in phonological variation. NLLT 31:47-89.
Background reading: sociolinguistics helping to establish the style "knob": William Labov (1972) "The isolation of contextual styles", from his book Sociolinguistic Patterns
Homework, due Mon. 4/23/18 in class: Biased modeling of generality effects in maxent. Here is the spreadsheet you need.
Background reading: the Albright Hayes wug test study referred to: Adam Albright and Bruce Hayes (2003) Rules vs. analogy in English past tenses: a computational/experimental Study. Cognition 90:119-161.
Wednesday 4/18/2018
Lecture 6: Knobs II: How to make constraints behave in lockstep under changes of style or other factors
Reading: Lise Menn (1983) Development of articulatory, phonetic, and phonological capabilities. In Brian Butterworth, Language Production vol. 2. Academic Press.
Week 4
Monday 4/23/2018
Lecture 7: Acquisition I: Children have two lexicons and two phonologies
Reading: Intro. and Chapter 1 of Neilson Smith (1973) The Acquisition of Phonology, Cambridge University Press.
Homework #3 (acquisition), due in class April 30. You will need a copy of the data appendix to Smith.
Wednesday 4/25/2018
Lecture 8: Acquisition II: OT as a model of child phonology; morphology; learning parental pattern I
Reading: Megha Sundara, Yun-Jung Kim, James White & Adam J. Chong (2013) There is no pat in patting: Acquisition of phonological alternations by English-learning 12-month-olds. BUCLD slides.
Homework #3 (above) is due in class Monday April 30.
Week 5
Monday 4/30/2018
Lecture 9: Acquisition III: Learning the parental phonology
Reading: Sharon Goldwater, Thomas L. Griffiths, and Mark Johnson (2009) A Bayesian framework for word segmentation: Exploring the effects of context. Cognition 112:21-54.
Wednesday 4/30/2018Lecture 10: Paradigm Uniformity I: examples
Reading: Bruce Hayes and James White (2015) Saltation and the P-map. Phonology 32:267-302.:
Week 6
Monday 5/7/2018
Lecture 11: Paradigm Uniformity II: examples from historical linguistics; framework
Reading: Steriade, Donca (2000) “Paradigm uniformity and the phonetics-phonology boundary,” in Papers in Laboratory Phonology 5, ed. Broe and Pierrehumbert.
Homework #4, on historical change by paradigm uniformity is handed out, due in class Monday 5/14/18.
Wednesday 5/7/2018Lecture 12: Paradigm Uniformity III: phonotactic liberality, experimental work, hierarchy of prosodic ranks
Reading: Steriade, Donca and Igor Yanovich, Igor. 2015. Accentual allomorphs in East Slavic: An argument for inflection dependence. in Eulalia Bonet, Maria-Rosa Lloret, Joan Mascaro (eds.) Understanding Allomorphy, Equinox Press, pp. 254-313.
Week 7
Monday 5/14/2018
Lecture 13: Paradigm Uniformity IV: what to be faithful to
Reading: Gordon, Matthew (2005) A perceptually-driven account of onset-sensitive stress, Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 23, 595-653.
Lecture 14: Syllable weight and phonetics
Reading: Kie Zuraw (2010) A model of lexical variation and the grammar with application to Tagalog nasal substitution. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory (2010) 28: 417–472.
Homework #5: Cyclic stress in Indonesian. Due in class Wed. May 30. This spreadsheet may be helpful.
Week 8
Monday 5/21/2018Lecture 15: Guest lecture by Kie Zuraw, on lexically irregular phonology. Handout.
Reading TBA
Wednesday 5/23/2018
Lecture 16: Guest lecture by Kie Zuraw, on lexically irregular phonology (same handout as before)
Week 9
Monday 5/28/2018
no class, Memorial Day
Wednesday 5/30/2018
Lecture 17: More on syllable weight: Ryan's Law for gradient contexts. Homework #5 is due.
Reading: Kevin Ryan, “Quantitative meter”, Chap. 4 of his book-in-progress Prosodic weight: categories and continua
Week 10
Monday 6/4/2018
Lecture 18: Generative phonetics I: widely spaced targets in FO
Reading: Mark Liberman and Janet Pierrehumbert (1984) “Intonational invariance under changes in pitch range and length”, in Stephen Anderson and Paul Kiparsky, A festschrift for Morris Halle
Wednesday 6/6/2018
Lecture 19: Generative Phonetics II: crowded targets with maxent; course summary
Reading: Edward Flemming and Hyesun Cho (2017) The phonetic specification of contour tones: evidence from the Mandarin rising tone. Phonology 34 (2017) 1–40.
Last
assignments: do appointment with me with handout by 6/13, Wed. of
Finals Week; term paper itself is due 6/15, Friday of Finals Week.