Review Notes 5 Flashcards

1
Q

A feature can be said to be active if:

A

It plays a role in phonological computation; if it is required to express phonological regularities in a language.

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2
Q

Phonological activity implies:

A

Phonological contrast.

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3
Q

What do we use Binarity for in Feature Emergence?

A

Markedness. A feature is either Marked (complex) or Unmarked (easy)

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4
Q

A vowel system with 3 vowels has how many possible hierarchies and why?

A

4, because it needs at least two features to distinguish the vowels from each other, and the order of the vowels changes the hierarchy.

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5
Q

What kind of feature underspecification takes place in Classical Manchu, and how do we find it?

A

[ATR] is underspecified for [i]. It is not (non-ATR) because it would trigger or undergo vowel harmony, and it does neither.

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6
Q

What kind of feature hierarchy exists in Classical Manchu in order to achieve its particular underspecification?

A

Syllabic > [+low] (non-low). [+low] splits into [+labial] (non-labial). (non-low) splits into [+coronal] (non-coronal). Both (non-labial) and (non-coronal) split into [+ATR] and (non-ATR). /i/ is [+coronal].

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7
Q

Phonological contrast is not the same as

A

phonetic contrast

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8
Q

We learn features as we develop because

A

features are phonological, not phonetic.

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9
Q

What are features?

A

Quantal (non-linear) relationships between articulatory configurations and regions of acoustic stability.

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10
Q

Universal Grammar is not:
And is:

A

A repository of Inborn Knowledge
A Language Learning device

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11
Q

Why might an early learner make phonetic mistakes, other than difficulty in pronounciation?

A

Because they haven’t identified certain contrasts.

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12
Q

What does Generative Theory bring to the table regarding feature development?

A

It separates features into abstract categories with recognizable boundaries.

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13
Q

What does Exemplarist Theory bring to the table regarding feature development?

A

It introduces sources of both linguistic and non-linguistic information. (Ambient Language, memory traces)

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14
Q

What is an example of something that requires both Generative and Exemplar Theory to understand?

A

Syllables. Exemplar Theory = stress. Generative Theory tells us what triggers the stress.

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15
Q

PRIMIR stands for

A

Processing Rich Information from Multi-dimensional Interactive Representations

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16
Q

What does PRIMIR support?

A

A feedback loop between what we hear, what we understand about phonemes, and what we articulate.

17
Q

What are children doing when learning phonemic rules?

A

Mapping speech articulations onto target forms from their perceptual domain.

18
Q

How much do kids generalize?

A

Only as much as they need to, with the information that they have.

19
Q

What does kids’ generalization in language learning tell us about their language learning process?

A

That they have some level of abstraction available, between speech sounds and articulation. Abstraction is proof of phonology.

20
Q

A feature pattern may be:

A

Context Free or Context Dependant.