Optimality Theory, Phonological Acquisition and Disorders - Daniel A. Dinnsen

Optimality Theory, Phonological Acquisition and Disorders - Daniel A. Dinnsen

8 Recalcitrant error patterns

Optimality Theory, Phonological Acquisition and Disorders - Daniel A. Dinnsen

Daniel A. Dinnsen [+-]
Indiana University
Daniel A. Dinnsen is Chancellor’s Professor of Linguistics and Adjunct Professor of Speech and Hearing Sciences at Indiana University, Bloomington. He is also a member of the Program in Cognitive Science and core faculty of the NIH Training Grant in Speech, Hearing, and Sensory Communication. He is Co-Principal Investigator of the Learnability Project, funded by the National Institutes of Health.

Description

Children typically suppress their phonological error patterns on their own without explicit instruction, although some error patterns may persist longer than others. For children with phonological delays or disorders, clinical intervention may be required to help eradicate those error patterns. However, treatment does not always meet with success. Certain error patterns appear to be especially recalcitrant, devolving into new overgeneralization errors and/or requiring multiple rounds of treatment. The theoretical and clinical challenge is to explain why some error patterns persist longer than others and/or why some error patterns respond well to treatment, while others do not. Optimality theory offers a fresh perspective on this issue through its characterization of children’s error patterns.

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Citation

Dinnsen, Daniel A. . 8 Recalcitrant error patterns. Optimality Theory, Phonological Acquisition and Disorders. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 247-276 Mar 2008. ISBN 9781845531218. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=21488. Date accessed: 21 Nov 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.21488. Mar 2008

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