03834nam 2200649 a 450 991079259500332120231122162656.03-11-021923-910.1515/9783110219234(CKB)2670000000018695(EBL)516523(OCoLC)630538755(SSID)ssj0000425227(PQKBManifestationID)11250146(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000425227(PQKBWorkID)10362694(PQKB)11751571(MiAaPQ)EBC516523(DE-B1597)36645(OCoLC)635962063(OCoLC)979731450(DE-B1597)9783110219234(Au-PeEL)EBL516523(CaPaEBR)ebr10381199(EXLCZ)99267000000001869520090717d2009 uy 0engur||#||||||||txtccrPhonology in perception[electronic resource] /edited by Paul Boersma, Silke HamannBerlin ;New York Mouton de Gruyterc20091 online resource (324 p.)Phonology and phonetics ;15Description based upon print version of record.3-11-021922-0 Includes bibliographical references and index.Introduction: Models of phonology in perception / Paul Boersma and Silke Hamann -- Why can Poles perceive Sprite but not Coca-Cola?: A Natural Phonological account / Anna Balas -- Cue constraints and their interactions in phonological perception and production / Paul Boersma -- The learner of a perception grammar as a source of sound change / Silke Hamann -- The linguistic perception of SIMILAR L2 sounds / Paola Escudero -- Stress adaptation in loanword phonology: perception and learnability / Ellen Broselow -- Perception of intonational contours on given and new referents: A completion study and an eye-movement experiment / Caroline Féry ... [et al.] -- Lexical access, effective contrast, and patterns in the lexicon / Adam Ussishkin and Andrew Wedel -- Phonology and perception: A cognitive scientist's perspective / James L. McClelland -- Index.The book consists of nine chapters dealing with the interaction of speech perception and phonology. Rather than accepting the common assumption that perceptual considerations influence phonological behaviour, the book aims to investigate the reverse direction of causation, namely the extent to which phonological knowledge guides the speech perception process. Most of the chapters discuss formalizations of the speech perception process that involve ranked phonological constraints. Theoretical frameworks argued for are Natural Phonology, Optimality Theory, and the Neigbourhood Activation Model. The book discusses the perception of segments, stress, and intonation in the fields of loanword adaptation, second language acquisition, and sound change. The book is of interest to phonologists, phoneticians and psycholinguists working on the phonetics-phonology interface, and to everybody who is interested in the idea that phonology is not production alone.Phonology and phonetics ;15.Grammar, Comparative and generalPhonology, ComparativeGrammar, Comparative and generalPhonologyPhonology.Psycholinguistics.Grammar, Comparative and generalPhonology, Comparative.Grammar, Comparative and generalPhonology.414Boersma Paul1500187Hamann Silke1971-1500188MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910792595003321Phonology in perception3726763UNINA