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Laboratory Phonology: Past successes and current questions,challenges,and goals1,2 Abigail C. Cohn Laboratory Phonology, both as a series of conferences and as a particular approach to the investigation of human sounds and sound systems, has been active for over twenty years. In this paper, I consider the goals and successes ofLaboratory Phonologyaswellasthecurrentchallenges.Iconcludethatthe successofLaboratoryPhonologyisthatthoseissueswhichatfirstweredefined intheefforttobridgephonology andphoneticsarenowunderstoodinaricher multidisciplinary way:The central question of understanding the relationship betweenthecognitiveandphysicalaspectsofhumanspeechisnowdefinedasa questionofcognitivescience.Ialsoexploreaseriesoffoundationalassumptions andarguethatweneedtobewillingtobecriticalofourworkingassumptions. To fully accomplish the work ahead of us, we need to extend our integrated methodologies totrulyintegrated models.Becausetheverynature oflanguage is so complex,anadequate model will becomplex.Themodel needsto enable us to accurately model adult grammar, not as epiphenomena, but as a system of knowledge, while also modeling acquisition, language use, and language change. 1. Introduction What is Laboratory Phonology? Most tangibly, Laboratory Phonology (Lab- Phon)isabiennialconference.3Moreimportantly,ithasgrownintoacommu- nity of scholars. The strength of Laboratory Phonology is its shared research agenda,achievedthrougheclecticism,notdogmatism. ThefirstLabPhonconferencetookplaceatTheOhioStateUniversity, June 1987.Itwasco-organizedbyMaryBeckmanandJohnKingstonwithabout40 peopleinattendance,mainlythepresenters,localstudents,andafewadditional scholars.Ithastakenplaceroughlyeverytwoyearssincethen(withonethree- year interval, hence the 10th was 19 years after the first). It has also usually alternatedbetweentheUnitedStatesandWesternEurope.ThetermLaboratory PhonologywascoinedbyJanetPierrehumbertintheplanningstagesofthefirst 4 AbigailC.Cohn conference.Oneofthecentralgoalsofthe firstmeetingwastobridge thedis- tinct subfields andsubcultures ofphonology and phonetics, andcrucially both phonologists and phoneticians were in attendance. LabPhon is a very special conference,bringing together alargecommunity of scholars with diverse per- spectivesbutsharedinterests,addressingthefundamentalquestionofthenature of human speech sounds and sound systems. Its organizational structure – in plenary session, with both papers and commentaries– maximizes the breadth anddepthofintellectualexchange. TounderstandthenatureofLaboratoryPhonology,weneedtoconsiderwhat it is beyond aconference.Laboratory Phonology is an approachto investigat- ing human sound systems, taking as foundational the premise that progress will be achieved more successfully through integrated methodologies. This view grows directly out of one of the central questions asked at LabPhon I, asstatedintheintroduction to theLabPhonIvolume(BeckmanandKingston 1990:3): Therefore,weask:howcanweusethephysicalmodelsandexperimentalpara- digmsofphoneticstoconstructmoreviablesurfacephonologicalrepresentations? Conversely, what can we learn about underlying phonetic representations and processes from the formal cognitive models and computational paradigms of phonology?Determiningtherelationshipbetweenthephonologicalcomponent andthephoneticcomponentdemandsahybridmethodology.[Emphasismine.] Whilethereissomedebate,manyholdthatLaboratoryPhonologyisnotatheory assuch.Pierrehumbert,Beckman,andLadd(2000:279)statethefollowing: Frameworksarepackagesofassumptionsaboutthefundamentalnatureoflan- guage,andtheresearchstrategyforempiricalinvestigationisdrivenbytop-down reasoningabouttheconsequencesoftheframework[...]Incontrast,laboratory phonologyisnotaframework.[...] itisacoalitionamongstgroupsofpeople, with some working in one or another of the various current frameworks, and othersworkinginnophonologicalframeworkatall. In this paper, I consider the goals and successes of Laboratory Phonology as well as the current challenges.The paper is divided roughly into two parts. In the first (§2), I try to characterize some of what we have accomplished over the past almost two decades.Inthe second (§3–§5), Iturn to the current chal- lenges,suggesting thatsomerefocusingofhowweframeourassumptionsand modelswillhelpustocontinuetomakeheadwayonthepressingquestionsthat faceus. LaboratoryPhonology:Pastsuccessesandcurrentquestions,challenges,andgoals 5 2. Goalsandaccomplishments In this section, Idiscuss the nature of the enterprise of Laboratory Phonology and consider how LaboratoryPhonology has changedhow we understand and dophonology andphonetics. Istartbygiving abriefoverviewoftheevolution of the goals of Laboratory Phonology as I see it. (I do not attempt to high- light individual contributions; this alone would take up morethan my allotted space.) At the outset, the central goal of Laboratory Phonology was, and I believe still is, gaining anunderstanding oftherelationship betweenthe cognitive and physicalaspectsofhumanspeech.ItisimportanttoemphasizethatLaboratory Phonology wasnot the inception of this sort ofintegrated, hybrid approach to investigating phonology and phonetics. A number of phoneticians and admit- tedly fewer phonologists were doing this sort of work at the time of the first LabPhon conference.LaboratoryPhonology wasacodificationandnamingof this approach. The firstLabPhon conferenceset out to bridge thegapbetween phonology andphonetics,toredefinethequestionsbeingasked,andtopromotemoreinte- gratedmethodologies.Forthefirstseveralmeetings,thequestionsandmethod- ologies were defined in terms of phonology and phonetics. These included a focus on prosody, segmental structure, and the mapping between phonology and phonetics. This can be seen by reviewing the themes of LabPhon I–IV, listed inTable 1 (including the date, location, conferenceorganizer(s)/volume editor(s),numberofattendees,volumetitle,andthemesforeachoftheLabPhon conferences). Table1. LabPhonI–X,date,location,conferenceorganizer(s)/volumeeditor(s),number ofattendees(#),volumetitle,andthemes Lab date location # title Phon – organizers – themes I ‘87 OSU 40 BetweentheGrammarandPhysicsofSpeech – JohnKingston – suprasegmentalphenomena – MaryBeckman – phonological representations and phonetic structures – segmentalorganizationandcoordination II ‘89 Edinburgh 88 Gesture,Segment,Prosody – GerryDocherty – gesture – BobLadd – segment – prosody 6 AbigailC.Cohn Lab date location # title Phon – organizers – themes III ‘91 UCLA 100 PhonologicalStructureandPhoneticForm – PatKeating – intonation – syllables – featuretheory – phoneticoutput IV ‘93 Oxford 80 PhonologyandPhoneticEvidence – BruceConnell – featuresandperception – AmaliaArvaniti – prosody – articulatoryorganization V ‘96 Northwestern 130 AcquisitionandtheLexicon – MichaelBroe – articulationandmentalrepresentation – JanetPierrehumbert – toneandintonation – acquisitionandlexicalrepresentation VI ‘98 York 90 PhoneticInterpretation -JohnLocal – phonologicalrepresentationsandthelexicon -RichardOgden – phoneticinterpretationandphrasalstructure -RosalindTemple – phoneticinterpretationandsyllablestructure – phonologyandnaturalspeechproduction VII ‘00 Nijmegen 115 – phonologicalprocessingandencoding – CarlosGussenhoven – inthelaboratoryandinthefield:relatingpho- – NatashaWarner neticsandphonology VIII ‘02 Yale 160 VarietiesofPhonologicalCompetence – LouisGoldstein – qualitativeandvariablefacesofphonological – DougWhalen competence – CatherineBest – sourcesofvariationandtheirroleintheac- quisitionofphonologicalcompetence – knowledgeoflanguage-specificorganization ofspeechgestures IX ‘04 UofIllinois 180 ChangeinPhonology – JenniferCole – acquisitionofsoundpatterns – Jose´Hualde – indexingofspeakeridentityinsoundpatterns – sourcesofsoundpatternsinmechanismsof speechperceptionandproduction – sourcesofsoundpatternsintheinteractionof first-andsecond-languagephonologies X ‘06 Paris 240 Variation,DetailandRepresentation – Ce´cileFougeron – variation, phonetic detail and phonological – Mariapaolo modeling D’Imperio – variationatthecrossroadbetweennormaland disorderedspeech – variationandtheemergenceofphonology – variationandlanguageuniversals LaboratoryPhonology:Pastsuccessesandcurrentquestions,challenges,andgoals 7 Laboratory Phonology brought into focussomeof thecentralquestions ofthe time, including the nature of the interface and the language-specific nature of phonetics (contra the view espoused by Chomsky and Halle 1968The Sound PatternofEnglish),leadingtotheconceptofphoneticknowledge(seeKingston andDiehl1994). The focus on integrated methodologies meantencouraging phonologists to extend their methodologies beyond the impressionistic and beyond the analy- sis of what Kenstowicz and Kisseberth (1979) termcorpus-internal evidence; that is, the transcription of a corpus of utterances.The methodologies include investigating corpus-externalevidence–abroaderrangeoflanguagebehavior whoseexplanationseemstodependonaspeaker’sknowledgeofthephonology ofhis/herlanguage. It also meant calling on phoneticians to enhance phonetics with more for- mal,quantitative,experimentalmethodology.Experimentalapproachesquickly expanded from linguistic phonetics to include psycholinguistic experimental approaches as well. Laboratory Phonology has enriched our understanding of whichfacetsofphoneticsinformphonologybothmethodologicallyandconcep- tually, emphasizing the importance of both production and perception. These methodologicalshiftswerefundamentaltobreakingdownthewaythatpractice in phonology and phonetics respectively led to “theassumed division of labor [...]creates[-ing]aharmfulillusionthatwecancompartmentalizephonological factsfromphonetics facts.”(BeckmanandKingston 1990:5.) Theemphasisonexperimentaldatahighlighted thewaysthatrelyingonim- pressionisticdataisinadequate.LaboratoryPhonologyhasplayedacriticalrole inshowingthatonlywithgreaterattentiontofinedetailinourempiricalstudies will webeabletodevelop adequatemodels.Ithasalsoverymuchencouraged the idea that we need to strengthen our base of empirical knowledge, through experimentalworkaswellasfieldworksupporting cross-languagedocumenta- tion. Linguistic phonetics sets as its goal the documentation of the sounds of thelanguagesoftheworld,inanefforttoanswerthequestions: Whatisapos- siblehumanspeechsound?Whatisapossiblesoundsystem?Whileitpredates Laboratory Phonology by many decades (even centuries on some interpreta- tions),linguisticphoneticsisnowunderstoodbymanytobepartofLaboratory Phonology.Noteworthyinthisregardaretherecentinitiativesinlanguagedoc- umentationwithparticularconcernforendangeredlanguages.4Descriptiveand typological workonsound systemsiscentraltotheseendeavors. Laboratory Phonology has led to more sophisticated modeling of speech, which can be seen through the increased participation of computational lin- guists. It has also fostered and benefited from the development of important researchtools sharedbythe community.Two primeexamplesareToBi (Beck- 8 AbigailC.Cohn man and Hirschberg 1994), a prosodic annotation system (described on the OSU department website, http://www.ling.ohio-state.edu/∼tobi/, as “a frame- workfordeveloping community-wide conventions fortranscribing the intona- tion and prosodic structure of spoken utterances in a language variety”) and Praat (Boersma and Weenink 2002), a free multi-platform acoustic analysis program(alsoincludingresynthesisandavarietyofothertoolsfortheanalysis andinvestigation ofspeech).Whatis important about thesetools beyond their intrinsicusefulnessisthattheyprovideacontextforshareddatacollectionand analysis. Acentralresult, seenthroughout theLabPhonconferencesandhighlighted inLabPhonVI,isanenrichedawarenessofvariation,notjustintermsofthede- tailsofphysicalrealization(implicitinphonetics),butalsointermsofvariation in all dimensions of language use, leading to the question of the role of vari- ation in the knowledge of sound systems.This awarenesshas included moves towardabetterunderstandingofsociolinguisticvariation,supportingthedevel- opment of sociophonetics (in contrast to descriptive dialectology). It has also challenged us to pay closer attention to the effects of variation in diachronic change (both themes of LabPhon IX).Attention to phonetics, as well as soci- olinguistic and diachronic detail, has revealed the closely integrated nature of languagecompetenceandlanguageperformance. Therehasalsobeenanincreasedorientationtowardpsycholinguistics.These issueswerebroughttotheforeatLabPhonV,whichexplicitlyincorporatedques- tions about languageacquisition andthe lexicon.The collective results of that meetinghighlightedtheroleofstochasticgeneralizationintheorganizationand knowledge of sound systems and questioned the framing of the relationship between phonology and phonetics as one of mapping between strict modules. Thisledtomuchmoredirectinvolvementofpsychology,leadingtoLaboratory Phonologybeingseenmoreclearlyascognitivescience.Recentmeetingscon- tinue to strengthen thesethemeswhile drawing in newempiricaldomains and approaches,e.g.LabPhonVII:phonologicalprocessingandencoding;LabPhon VIII:signedlanguage;LabPhonIX:secondlanguageacquisition; LabPhonX: disorderedspeech. Some simple statistics highlight these developments. Consider first how Laboratory Phonology has grown. Looking at the number of attendees at the LabPhon conferences I–X, Figure 1, we see that there has been very robust growth,from40to240participants. LabPhonhasgrownfrombeingaworkshoptoamajorconference.Bymain- taining the original organizational structure, with all presentations in plenary sessionsandwithbothpapersandinvitedcommentaries,ithaseffectivelymain- tainedaworkshop format,albeitwith amuchlargeraudience.Thisformathas LaboratoryPhonology:Pastsuccessesandcurrentquestions,challenges,andgoals 9 Figure1. Number(#)ofattendeesatLabPhonI–X beenhighlysuccessfulinfosteringthoughtfulandthought-provokingdiscussion andexchange.SinceLabPhonII,it hasbecomeincreasinglyinternational. For LabPhon X, there were abstracts submitted from 27 countries. With LabPhon XI having taken place in New Zealand, the increasing geographical diversity of theparticipants is mirroredbyour firstmeetingin thesouthern hemisphere (indeedthefirstoutside ofWesternEuropeortheUnitedStates). Next considerthesubfieldsanddisciplines representedatLabPhon.InFig- ure2,thereisacomparisonofthespecializationoftheoralpresentersatLabPhon I,II,IX,andX. This is a very rough (and debatable) characterization of the specialization of the presenters of oral presentations. It does not include poster presenters. In the case of coauthored papers, only the first author is included, unless the collaboration includes multiple subfields or multiple institutions. We can see that at the first two meetings, the presenters were primarily phoneticians and phonologists,whiletherangeofspecializationsofthepresentersatLabPhonIX and X highlights the truly multi-disciplinary nature of Laboratory Phonology. Just the task of identifying the primary specialization of presenters indicated a significant change as it was much harder to identify a primary area of spe- cialization formanyofthe participants in LabPhonIXand Xthan forthefirst two.Notcodedhere,butnoteworthy,isthefactthatthereweremanymorejoint 10 AbigailC.Cohn Figure2. Specializationsoforalpresenters,LabPhonI,II,IX,X presentations at LabPhon IX and X, many of which were across disciplines. Thus, Laboratory Phonology has not only becomemoremultidisciplinary, but collaborativelyso. There have consistently been more phoneticians than phonologists partici- pating,andsinceLabPhonIItherehasbeenanincreasingly greaterproportion of phoneticians, although this trend was broken at LabPhon X.Also, with the clear exception of LabPhon IX, all of the organizers have been more on the phoneticsside. All of this speaks to Laboratory Phonology’s successful development as a recognizedapproachtotheinvestigation ofhumansounds andsound systems. Additional evidencethat Laboratory Phonology has established itself includes the fact that some job ads list Laboratory Phonology as a subfield, and many finishing graduate students describe their specialization as being Laboratory Phonology. Noteworthy in this regard is the fact that at the 150th meeting of theAcousticalSocietyofAmerica,Iandmanycolleaguespresentedpostersin asessionentitledLaboratoryPhonology(!). AnotherwaytoassessthesuccessandacceptanceofLaboratoryPhonology is to consider where Laboratory Phonology work appears.Almost definition- ally, the most important venue is the LabPhon volumes themselves. Each vol- umehas proved the test of time with seminal work held to very high editorial LaboratoryPhonology:Pastsuccessesandcurrentquestions,challenges,andgoals 11 standards.Therehavealsobeenanumberofimportanteditedvolumesonpho- netic/phonology themes(e.g.OhalaandJaeger1986ExperimentalPhonology; Burton-Roberts,Carr,andDocherty2000Phonological Knowledge:Concepts and Empirical Issues;HumeandJohnson 2001TheRoleofSpeechPerception inPhonology;Hayes,Kirchner,andSteriade2004PhoneticallyBasedPhonol- ogy;andSole´,Beddor,andOhala2007ExperimentalApproachestoPhonology; amongothers). What about journals? Indications suggest mixed results on this front. We canconsiderwhetherlaboratoryapproachesplayanincreasinglyimportantrole in the journal Phonology. First, it is important to remember that Phonology (originally Phonology Yearbook) defined its purview in a way that certainly encompassed Laboratory Phonology: “The PhonologyYearbook is committed to thestimulation, dissemination, andcross-fertilization ofideasinphonology andthosedisciplines whichimpingeonit.”(PhonologyYearbook 11985:vii.) Indeedoneofthefirstvolumes,PhonologyYearbook 3,takesasoneofitstwo themesthe validation ofclaimsin phonology. Nevertheless, wecanseeashift intheacceptanceofintegratedmethodologies ifwecompare,forexample,the first non-thematic volume, Phonology 5.1 (1988), with more recent volumes. In Phonology 5.1, the papers were all straight phonology, including articles on syllable structure, metrical constituency and reduplication, all written by theoretical phonologists. In a recent volume, Phonology 22.1 (2005), of the five papers – on topics ranging from identity in Optimality Theory to vowel- length neutralization – threearestraight phonology andtwo takeaLaboratory Phonologyapproach,includingexperimentalphoneticdata,aswellasevidence fromalliedsubfields(acquisition andlanguagechange). On the other hand, it seems that Laboratory Phonology has had less direct impact on the inclusion of phonology in phonetics journals. Some reflections of Laboratory Phonology areseen in Journal of Phonetics and Journal of the InternationalPhoneticAssociation;thereseemstolesseffectonotherphonetics journals.Thismaybedueinparttothepositionofphoneticsasmultidisciplinary (notjust representinglinguistic phonetics)aswell aseditorial policy, e.g.page limitsandstrictlystructuredformat.Perhapsironically,itmayalsobeduetoone of the costs of Laboratory Phonology’s success. Impressionistic phonological analysesarenowoftencomplementedbyexperimentalwork,butthatworkisnot carriedout orpresentedinthewaysthatarecharacteristicofphoneticsjournal publications.5 A question I have heard raised from time to time is whether Laboratory Phonology should have its own journal. In the preconference draft of this pa- per,myconclusion to this question was“Idon’tthink so”. AtLabPhon X,the decision was reached to form a Laboratory Phonology society and launch a 12 AbigailC.Cohn journal. In light ofthis felicitous decision (which speaks very directly to Lab- oratoryPhonology’scomingofage),Ireframemyreservationsasacautionary note.ItisimportantthatthenewjournalfosterthecentralpointthatLaboratory Phonology is about the integration of phonology, phonetics, and increasingly allied fields.Weneedto ensurethat creationof anewjournal does not leadto furtherfragmentationofthefieldbysiphoning offreadershipandsubmissions tootherlinguistic andcognitivesciencevenues. Inmanyways,thecentralgoalsofbetterdialogacrossboundaries,betterin- tegrationofmethodology,andbettercollaboration,haveremainedthehallmarks ofLaboratoryPhonology.ThesuccessofLaboratoryPhonologyisthatthoseis- sueswhichatfirstweredefinedintheefforttobridgephonologyandphonetics are now understood more broadly, as truly interdisciplinary questions, bridg- inglinguistics withpsychology, computerscience,etc.Thecentralquestion of understanding the relationship between the cognitive and physical aspects of humanspeechisnowdefinedasaquestion ofcognitivescience. 3. Currentquestionsandchallenges As we have just seen, Laboratory Phonology has had genuine success both in termsofredefiningthequestions thatweaskaboutthenatureofhumansound systems and in terms of enriching the methodologies that we use to answer these questions.Yet many challenging questions still present themselves, and muchworkremainsforustoprovidefullysatisfactoryanswerstotheseage-old questions.Thesequestions includethefollowing: – Whatisphonologicalknowledge–asdistinctfromphoneticorlexicalknowl- edge? – Whataretheunits ofspeech–features,segments,syllables, words? – Aretherenaturalclasses,andwhataretheirroles? – Whatismarkedness? – Whatisnaturalness,andwhatisitssource? – Towhatdegreearephonologicalandphoneticsystemslanguage-specific,and towhatdegreearetheycommontoallhumanlanguages? – Inwhatwaysdoboth productionandperceptionaffectphonology? – Howarelinguistic knowledgeandlanguageuseintegrated? – Whatis therelationship betweensynchronic sounds systems anddiachronic change? – Howdoes the processof languageacquisition result in the knowledge of an adultphonology?

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Bob Ladd. 88. Gesture, Segment, Prosody. – gesture. – segment. – prosody phonetics (contra the view espoused by Chomsky and Halle 1968 The Sound. Pattern of English) Laboratory Phonology has played a critical role in showing that . a set of assumptions underlying generative linguistics
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