Exemplar Dynamics and Sound Merger in Language
P. F. Tupper

TL;DR
This paper presents a model of how phonological contrasts are maintained or lost in language, showing that discarding anomalous utterances is crucial for preserving sound distinctions like 'i' and 'e' in speech.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel exemplar-based model that explains the conditions under which phonological contrasts are preserved or merged in natural language.
Findings
Contrast preservation requires discarding anomalous utterances.
Sound merger occurs when contrast is not maintained.
Exemplar density evolution explains phonological change.
Abstract
We develop a model of phonological contrast in natural language. Specifically, the model describes the maintenance of contrast between different words in a language, and the elimination of such contrast when sounds in the words merge. An example of such a contrast is that provided by the two vowel sounds 'i' and 'e', which distinguish pairs of words such as 'pin' and 'pen' in most dialects of English. We model language users' knowledge of the pronunciation of a word as consisting of collections of labeled exemplars stored in memory. Each exemplar is a detailed memory of a particular utterance of the word in question. In our model an exemplar is represented by one or two phonetic variables along with a weight indicating how strong the memory of the utterance is. Starting from an exemplar-level model we derive integro-differential equations for the evolution of exemplar density fields in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhonetics and Phonology Research · Linguistic Variation and Morphology · Speech Recognition and Synthesis
