18.1007, Confs: Phonetics,Phonology/Netherlands

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LINGUIST List: Vol-18-1007. Tue Apr 03 2007. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 18.1007, Confs: Phonetics,Phonology/Netherlands

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1)
Date: 02-Apr-2007
From: Marc van Oostendorp < Marc.van.Oostendorp at Meertens.knaw.nl >
Subject: Segments and Tone

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-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Tue, 03 Apr 2007 09:50:10
From: Marc van Oostendorp < Marc.van.Oostendorp at Meertens.knaw.nl >
Subject:  Segments and Tone 
 

Segments and Tone 

Date: 07-Jun-2007 - 08-Jun-2007 
Location: Amsterdam, Netherlands 
Contact: Marc van Oostendorp 
Contact Email: Marc at vanOostendorp.nl 

Linguistic Field(s): Phonetics; Phonology 

Meeting Description: 

'Segments and tone' is a two-day workshop on the relations between
segmental structure and tonal phenomena, both from a synchronic and from a
diachronic, and both from a phonetic and from a phonological perspective. 

Theme
Tone features are commonly assigned to prosodic levels such as moras or
syllables to account for their autosegmental behavior (in spreading, for
instance). But this does not bar them from interacting with segmental properties
of at least three types:

- laryngeal features: prevocalic voiced consonants may induce a low tone or
block a high tone, postvocalic glottalization/aspiration may induce rising or
falling tones;
- sonority: tones may only occur on consonants that are sufficiently sonorous;
- vowel height: high vowels have a phonetic preference for higher tone.

These phenomena still raise many theoretical and empirical questions, for
instance: Why is the phonetic effect of vowel height on fundamental frequency
(almost?) never phonologized even though it is at least as large as that of
obstruent voicing, which does give rise to tone contrasts? What is the reason
for the asymmetrical influence of laryngeal configurations on tone (pre- vs.
postvocalic)? Do segmental and tonal features interact directly or rather
indirectly, mediated by syllable and/or foot structure (as claimed for the
interaction between vowel height and tone in Fuzhou, for instance) or other
prosodic properties (e.g., register distinctions as a medial diachronic step
between the loss of obstruent voicing and tonogenesis in many Southeast Asian
languages)? Finally, how do we deal with exceptions to the tendencies mentioned
above, e.g. languages like U (Mon-Khmer) or Central and Low Franconian
(Germanic), in which vowel height and postvocalic voicing distinctions do play a
role in tonogenesis?

Organizers

The research project Tone and Intrasegmental Structure in Franconian Dialects,
sponsored by the Dutch Science Foundation NWO, studies the synchronic and
diachronic phonetic and phonological factors which contribute to our
understanding of the ontogenesis and present distribution of tone in the group
of West Germanic dialects known as Franconian.

All the relevant factors can probably found in other languages as well. For this
reason, the present workshop brings together members of the project with
researchers working on a large variety of other languages.

The research is conducted by Paul Boersma, Ben Hermans, Wolfgang Kehrein, Björn
Köhnlein, Marc van Oostendorp and Maike Prehn, at the Institute for Phonetic
Sciences of the University of Amsterdam and the Meertens Institute of the Royal
Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in Amsterdam.

Practical information

There will be no fee for participation in this event. Participants should buy
their own lunch and dinner, however. Lunch can be bought at the Meertens
Instituut, the location of the conference. We are planning to organize a dinner
somewhere in Amsterdam on Thursday for everybody who is interested.
More information can be found at our website:
http://www.meertens.knaw.nl/cms/index.php?option=com_
content&task=view&id=141408&Itemid=70





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