Surkalovic 2015: The No-Reference Hypothesis: A Modular Approach to the Syntax-Phonology Interface

Direct link: http://roa.rutgers.edu/content/article/files/1517_surkalovic_1.pdf

ROA: 1272
Title: The No-Reference Hypothesis: A Modular Approach to the Syntax-Phonology Interface
Authors: Dragana Surkalovic
Comment:  
Length: 322
Abstract: This dissertation investigates the interface of syntax and phonology in a fully modular view of language, deriving the effects of syntactic structure on prosodification without referring to that structure in the phonological computation. It explores the effects of the Multiple Spell-Out Hypothesis and ‘syntax-all-the-way-down approaches’, specifically Nanosyntax, on the phonological computation. The dissertation addresses three issues for modularity: (i) phonology can see edges of syntactic constituents, (ii) phonology distinguishes between lexical and functional elements in syntax, and (iii) phonology recognizes Information Structure marking features. The No-Reference Hypothesis is presented as the solution. It states that phonological computation needs to proceed in phases in order to achieve domain mapping while maintaining an input to phonology consisting of purely phonological information. The dissertation provides an explicit account of how the outputs of different phases get linearized wrt each other, providing arguments that spell-out does not proceed in chunks but produces cumulative cyclic input to phonology. An analysis is provided, using data from English, Kayardild and Ojibwa, showing how prosodic domains can be derived from phases by phonological computation being faithful to the prosodification output of the previous phase. The analysis is formalized by introducing Phase-Phase Faithfulness constraints to Optimality Theory.
Type: Dissertation
Keywords: Phonology, Syntax, interface, modularity, phases, Nanosyntax, linearization