Journal article icon

Journal article

Conservativity in the scope of phonological generalization learning

Abstract:

Phonological alternations that arise due to morphological concatenation often serve to enforce static phonotactic generalizations within the lexicon. Due to this close link, both these generalizations are encoded using a single mechanism in constraint-based models like Optimality Theory. Evidence of this link in learning, however, is equivocal. In this study we examine whether learners readily extend a generalization from alternations to phonotactics. Learners were trained on consonant harmony alternations that involved harmony between a suffix and stem consonant, while stems were ambiguous in terms of phonotactic generalizations. We then examined whether learners extended the alternation generalization to phonotactic judgements about novel stems. While learners successfully learnt the alternations in training, they failed to extend this generalization to phonotactic judgements about novel stems. Taken together with previous findings, our results suggest that learners are conservative in extending learnt generalizations to unseen morphological contexts. Overall, these results suggest that link between phonotactics and alternations might not be as tight as previously suggested.

Publication status:
Accepted
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

Actions

Authors

More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
HUMS
Department:
Linguistics Philology & Phonetics
Oxford college:
Kellogg College
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0002-2475-5219


Publisher:
De Gruyter
Journal:
Linguistics Vanguard: A Multimodal Journal for the Language Sciences More from this journal
Acceptance date:
2026-03-24
EISSN:
2199-174X


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
2409168
Local pid:
pubs:2409168
Deposit date:
2026-04-20
ARK identifier:

Terms of use


Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP