Abstract

The study explored whether an asymmetric phonetic overlap between speech sounds could be turned into sound change through propagation around a community of speakers. The focus was on the change of /s/ to /ʃ/ which is known to be more likely than a change in the other direction both synchronically and diachronically. An agent-based model was used to test the prediction that communication between agents would advance /s/-retraction in /str/ clusters (e.g. string). There was one agent per speaker and the probabilistic mapping between words, phonological classes, and speech signals could be updated during communication depending on whether an agent listener absorbed an incoming speech signal from an agent talker into memory. Followinginteraction, sibilants in /str/ clusters were less likely to share a phonological class with prevocalic /s/ and were acoustically closer to /ʃ/. The findings lend support to the idea that sound change is the outcome of a fortuitous combination of the relative size and orientation of phonetic distributions, their association to phonological classes, and how these types of information vary between speakers that happen to interact with each other.

Highlights

  • Phonetic variation is very often directional such that the likelihood of a shift in a phonetic distribution Y towards another distribution X is usually not matched by an probable change in X towards Y (Garrett & Johnson 2013)

  • We expanded the data set, increasing the number of words containing sibilants in these particular contexts. This was necessary because we wanted the initial state of the agent-based model to represent a more realistic snapshot of the synchronic variation that exists for sibilants in /str/ clusters in the language spoken by this particular community and for reasons to do with splitting and merging of phonological classes

  • The overall hypothesis to be tested in this study was that interaction would cause ­sibilants in words to shift along the direction of the sound change /s/ → /ʃ/

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Summary

Introduction

Phonetic variation is very often directional such that the likelihood of a shift in a phonetic distribution Y towards another distribution X is usually not matched by an probable change in X towards Y (Garrett & Johnson 2013). We expanded the data set, increasing the number of words containing sibilants in these particular contexts This was necessary because we wanted the initial state of the agent-based model to represent a more realistic snapshot of the synchronic variation that exists for sibilants in /str/ clusters in the language spoken by this particular community and for reasons to do with splitting and merging of phonological classes (see 3.1). Catastrophic overshadowed assembly pastrami, astringent disheveled assault destroy, restrict machine strong_weak (u) fascinating catastrophe, pedestrian information possible astronaut, oestrogen passionate messy gastro, district tissue weak_weak (u) motorcycle administrate, claustrophobic perishable policy chemistry, orchestra polishing monosyllable (s) same, seen, soak stream, strong, strut

Acoustic parameters
Architecture of the agent-based model
Splitting and merging of phonological classes
Agent-internal phonological reclassification
Interaction between agents
Testing for phonological reclassification
Testing for acoustic change
Results
Bi-directional effects of phonological re-classification and acoustic change
Full Text
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