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ROA:955
Title:Using learnability as a filter on factorial typology: a new approach to Anderson and Browne's generalization
Authors:John Alderete
Comment:In Lingua 118: 1177-1220
Length:44
Abstract:ABSTRACT. This article investigates the learnability filter (LF) hypothesis, according to which the set of logically possible grammars predicted by linguistic theory is reduced to a proper subset of learnable grammars by external principles of language learning. Anti-faithfulness constraints (Alderete, 2001a) provide a linguistic theory that predicts the existence of circular chain shifts of two segment types, including purely phonological exchanges that are unattested cross-linguistically (Anderson and Browne, 1973). Overt data representing such systems are fed into a standard OT learning model in which learners have IO-antifaithfulness constraints at their disposal. Despite this evidence and these constraints, learners always select grammars in which segmental exchanges are restricted to morphologically defined environments, consistent with typological findings. These results are shown to have implications for the nature of constraints in Optimality Theory, the correct analysis of morpho-phonological alternations, and a host of representational assumptions in phonology and morphology.


SUPPLEMENT. The overt forms of the two linguistic typologies developed here (test typology I and test typology II) are included in a separate PDF document.
Type:Paper/tech report
Area/Keywords:Phonology,Morphology,Learnability
Article:Part 1
Part 2