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Published byRichard Whalen Modified over 11 years ago
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Optimality Theory (OT) Prepared and presented by: Abdullah Bosaad & Liú Chàng Spring 2011
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- OT started around 1990 when Alan Prince and Paul Smolensky wrote a book-length manuscript called Optimality Theory: Constraint Interaction in Generative Grammar, which had a terrific impact on the field of linguistics. - According to McCarthy, OT is considered one of the top three developments in the history of generative grammar. (2008)
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- OT shows how certain constraints interact with each other, and how this interaction leads to the best well-formed candidate. -In OT, the higher-priority constraint dominates the lower-priority constraint. - OT is inherently comparative; no output candidate is good or bad by itself. Its only good or bad in relation to other candidates from the same input.
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- Language X has the following two constraints with higher-priority to (a), and lower-priority to (b): a) only clusters that consist of two consonants are allowed b) no final vowel is allowed. Which one of the following outputs candidates could be the winner? 1) [klasta], [klastus] 2) [mgtesk], [mtesku]
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1) The constraints themselves are universal 2) All constraints are present in the grammar of all languages (phonology and syntax). However, constraints ranking is the only systematic difference among languages.
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In OT, constraints are divided into two kinds: a) Faithfulness Constraints: impose the exact preservation of the input in the output (i.e. prohibit differences between input and output). Ex. Dep = output depends on input b) Markedness constraints: impose conditions on the well- formedness of the output. Ex. *C unsyll = no unsyllabified cons/ no consonant stays by itself in a syllable
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1) GEN (Generator): provides the list of possible outputs candidates for a given input: /input/ GEN {list of outputs} 2) CON (Constraints) 3) EVAL (Evaluator): its job is to find the optimal candidate: /input/ GEN {list of outputs} CON EVAL [the optimal output]
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- An objection to optimality theory is the claim that it is not technically a theory, in that it does not make falsifiable predictions. The source of this issue is terminology; the term "theory. - Optimality theory is also criticized as being an impossible model of speech production/perception: computing and comparing an infinite number of possible candidates would take an infinitely long time to process.
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It is impossible to make a direct ranking argument when constraints are in a stringency relation or general-specific relation (when every violation of CONST2 is also a violation of CONST1, but not vise versa) EX. a. IDENT ([voice]) assign one violation mark for every output segment that differs from its input correspondent in the feature [voice]. b. IDENT onset ([voice]) assign one violation mark for every output segment in syllable onset position that differs from its input correspondent in the feature [voice].
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- What happens when two outputs tie on all the constraints that have been considered so far? CONST3CONST2CONST1 **cand1 **cand2 CONST4CONST3CONST2CONST1 **cand1 ***cand2
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