FIML changes your personality and sense of group allegiance

2 thoughts on “FIML changes your personality and sense of group allegiance

  1. A much closer connection between phonological grammar and mental lexicon is revealed by studies of gradience in phonology using linguistic and metalinguistic data. The discovery of these new dimensions of phonological variation would not have been possible without corpus methods and data from groups of participants in psycholinguistic experiments. The presence of gradient phonological constraints illustrates that phonological knowledge goes beyond a categorical symbolic representation of possible forms in a language. To accommodate the broader scope of phonological generalizations, models of grammar will have to become more like models of other cognitive domains, which have long recognized and debated the nature of frequency and similarity effects for mental representation and processing. Well-understood mechanisms of speech perception and speech production bind the scope of phonological variability. Phonological categories and phonological patterns give a sufficiently rich and intricate variety of alternatives to explore the full complexity of cognitive processes.

    1. This comment comes from what looks like a spam account, but it is a good and relevant comment. Smart machine, if a machine copied that and stuck it in here.

      “Well-understood mechanisms of speech perception and speech production bind the scope of phonological variability. Phonological categories and phonological patterns give a sufficiently rich and intricate variety of alternatives to explore the full complexity of cognitive processes.”

      I agree, though maybe not with the “full complexity” part. Complexity sounds better.

      Anyway, this aspect of communication is a major part of any FIML discussion. FIML indeed seeks to “explore the full complexity of cognitive processes” and communicative ones in any way partners can think of, including phonology. Anything that can cause communication or cause a misunderstanding is a topic suited to FIML discussions.

Leave a reply to ABN Cancel reply