Phonological representation: beyond abstract versus episodic

Phonological representations capture information about individual word forms and about the general characteristics of word forms in a language. To support the processing of novel word forms as well as familiar word forms in novel contexts, an abstract level of representation is needed in which many...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pierrehumbert, J
Format: Journal article
Published: Annual Reviews 2016
_version_ 1826268108827918336
author Pierrehumbert, J
author_facet Pierrehumbert, J
author_sort Pierrehumbert, J
collection OXFORD
description Phonological representations capture information about individual word forms and about the general characteristics of word forms in a language. To support the processing of novel word forms as well as familiar word forms in novel contexts, an abstract level of representation is needed in which many phonetic details and contextual features are disregarded. At the same time, evidence has accumulated that such details are retained in memory and used in processing individual words and indexical features of language. Taken together, these results mean that a hybrid model of phonological representation is needed. The abstract level supports generalizations based on lexical type statistics and fast adaptation to communicative requirements through the reuse of existing categories. A richly detailed level of representation is implicated in word-specific phonetic patterns, the detailed dynamics of regular sound changes, and active associations of phonetic patterns with gender, age, and dialect.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T21:04:33Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:3c0055fd-11e7-4dd6-8783-a85fe543df1a
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T21:04:33Z
publishDate 2016
publisher Annual Reviews
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:3c0055fd-11e7-4dd6-8783-a85fe543df1a2022-03-26T14:10:59ZPhonological representation: beyond abstract versus episodicJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:3c0055fd-11e7-4dd6-8783-a85fe543df1aSymplectic Elements at OxfordAnnual Reviews2016Pierrehumbert, JPhonological representations capture information about individual word forms and about the general characteristics of word forms in a language. To support the processing of novel word forms as well as familiar word forms in novel contexts, an abstract level of representation is needed in which many phonetic details and contextual features are disregarded. At the same time, evidence has accumulated that such details are retained in memory and used in processing individual words and indexical features of language. Taken together, these results mean that a hybrid model of phonological representation is needed. The abstract level supports generalizations based on lexical type statistics and fast adaptation to communicative requirements through the reuse of existing categories. A richly detailed level of representation is implicated in word-specific phonetic patterns, the detailed dynamics of regular sound changes, and active associations of phonetic patterns with gender, age, and dialect.
spellingShingle Pierrehumbert, J
Phonological representation: beyond abstract versus episodic
title Phonological representation: beyond abstract versus episodic
title_full Phonological representation: beyond abstract versus episodic
title_fullStr Phonological representation: beyond abstract versus episodic
title_full_unstemmed Phonological representation: beyond abstract versus episodic
title_short Phonological representation: beyond abstract versus episodic
title_sort phonological representation beyond abstract versus episodic
work_keys_str_mv AT pierrehumbertj phonologicalrepresentationbeyondabstractversusepisodic