Optimality Theory has revolutionized phonological theory, and its insights are now being applied to other central aspects of language. With contributors that include the leading researchers in the field, this book presents the first fruits of such research as applied to syntax and to language acquisition, as well as considering the main lines of attack on OT by rule-based grammarians.
Introduction Optimality Theory: Phonology, Syntax, and Acquisition,Paul Boersma, Joost Dekkers, and Jeroen van de Weijer Part Ia: Phonology - Prosodic Representations Cycles, Non-Derived-Environment Blocking and Correspondence,Luigi Burzio Gradient Well-Formedness in Optimality Theory,Bruce Hayes Stem Stress and Peak Correspondence in Dutch,Ren? Kager Faithfulness and Prosodic Circumscription,John McCarthy Part Ib: Phonology - Segmental Phonology Loan Phonology: Perception, Salience, the Lexicon, and OT,Haike Jacobs and Carlos Gussenhoven Derivational Residue: Hidden Rules in OT,Darlene LaCharit? and Carole Paradis Dependency Theory Meets OT: A Proposal for a New Approach to Segmental Structure,Norval Smith Part II: Syntax Absolute Ungrammaticality,Peter Ackema and Ad Neeleman Toward an Optimal Account of Second Position Phenomena,Stephen R. Anderson Optimal Syntax,Joan Bresnan Minimalism and OT: Derivations and Filters,Hans Broekhuis and Joost Dekkers Morphological and Prosodic Alignment of Bulgarian Clitics,G?raldine Legendre Part III: The Acquisition of Syntax and Phonology Learning a Grammar in Functional Phonology,Paul Boersma The Universal Constraint Set: Convention not Fact,Mark Ellison Learning Phonology: Genetic Algorithms and Yoruba Tongue Root Harmony,Douglas Pulleyblank and William Turkel Optimalil³q