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Calculating phonological complexity
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1: Complexity and phonological primitives
- Complexity in phonetics and phonology: gradience, categoriality, and naturalness 19
- Languages’ sound inventories: the devil in the details 47
- Signal dynamics in the production and perception of vowels 59
-
Part 2: Typological approaches to measuring complexity
- Calculating phonological complexity 83
- Favoured syllabic patterns in the world’s languages and sensorimotor constraints 111
- Structural complexity of phonological systems 141
- Scale-free networks in phonological and orthographic wordform lexicons 171
-
Part 3: Phonological representations in the light of complex adaptive systems
- The dynamical approach to speech perception: From fine phonetic detail to abstract phonological categories 191
- A dynamical model of change in phonological representations: The case of lenition 219
- Cross-linguistic trends in the perception of place of articulation in stop consonants: A comparison between Hungarian and French 241
- The complexity of phonetic features' organisation in reading 267
-
Part 4: Complexity in the course of language acquisition
- Self-organization of syllable structure: a coupled oscillator model 297
- Internal and external influences on child language productions 329
- Emergent complexity in early vocal acquisition: Cross linguistic comparisons of canonical babbling 353
- Backmatter 377
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1: Complexity and phonological primitives
- Complexity in phonetics and phonology: gradience, categoriality, and naturalness 19
- Languages’ sound inventories: the devil in the details 47
- Signal dynamics in the production and perception of vowels 59
-
Part 2: Typological approaches to measuring complexity
- Calculating phonological complexity 83
- Favoured syllabic patterns in the world’s languages and sensorimotor constraints 111
- Structural complexity of phonological systems 141
- Scale-free networks in phonological and orthographic wordform lexicons 171
-
Part 3: Phonological representations in the light of complex adaptive systems
- The dynamical approach to speech perception: From fine phonetic detail to abstract phonological categories 191
- A dynamical model of change in phonological representations: The case of lenition 219
- Cross-linguistic trends in the perception of place of articulation in stop consonants: A comparison between Hungarian and French 241
- The complexity of phonetic features' organisation in reading 267
-
Part 4: Complexity in the course of language acquisition
- Self-organization of syllable structure: a coupled oscillator model 297
- Internal and external influences on child language productions 329
- Emergent complexity in early vocal acquisition: Cross linguistic comparisons of canonical babbling 353
- Backmatter 377