Home page of Elliott Moreton
Department of Linguistics
Smith Building, Room 101
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3155
U.S.A.
My email address is my last name (note spelling) at unc.edu.
Classes (Fall 2009):
Sign up here for
the Linguistics Department's soundproof chamber in Dey 103.
Useful stuff:
Publications and presentations:
- Moreton, Elliott (2008). Modelling modularity bias in
phonological pattern learning. In: Natasha Abner,
Jason Bishop, and Kevin Ryan (eds.), Proceedings of
the 27th Meeting of the West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics
(WCCFL), 1-16.
[
Abstract and paper]
[paper]
[BLUMPS 2.0 (tarred and gzipped)]
- Moreton, Elliott (2008). Analytic bias and phonological
typology. Phonology 25(1):83--127.
[Abstract]
[Paper (pdf),
version of 2008 Jan. 17.]
[Stimuli for
Experiments 1 and 2]
[Scripts
that produced the frequency counts in Section 7]
- Moreton, Elliott (2008). Learning bias as a factor in
phonological typology. In: Charles Chang and Anna
Haynie (eds.), Proceedings of the 26th Meeting of the West Coast
Conference on Formal Linguistics (WCCFL), 393--401.
[Handout]
[
Abstract and paper ]
(This is essentially the NELS talk plus two more experiments.)
- Moreton, Elliott (to appear). Underphonologization and
modularity bias. To appear in: Steve Parker (ed.),
Phonological Argumentation: Essays on Evidence and Motivation.
London: Equinox.
[Abstract] [Draft (pdf)] [Draft of
2006/5/27 at
ROA-830]
- Moreton, Elliott, Gary Feng, and Jennifer L. Smith 2008.
Syllabification, sonority, and perception: new evidence from a
language game. In: Rodney L. Edwards, Patrick J. Midtlyng,
Colin L. Sprague, and Kjersti G. Stensrud (eds.), Proceedings from
the Main Session of the Forty-First Meeting of the Chicago
Linguistic Society, 341-355.
[Abstract]
[Draft (pdf)]
- Moreton, Elliott, and Erik R. Thomas (2007). Origins
of Canadian Raising in voiceless-coda effects: a case study in
phonologization. Jennifer S. Cole and Jose' Ignacio Hualde (eds.),
Laboratory Phonology 9, 37-64. Berlin: Mouton
[Abstract]
[Manuscript (pdf)
]
- Moreton, Elliott (2007). Competition in perception
grammar. Presentation at the workshop on "Experimental Approaches
to Optimality Theory (ExpOT)", Ann Arbor, May 18-20, 2007.
[Handout].
- Moreton, Elliott (2006). Phonotactic learning and
phonological typology. Presentation at the 37th meeting of the
Northeast Linguistics Society, Urbana, Illinois, October 13-15,
2006.
[Abstract].
[Handout].
- Moreton, Elliott (2004). Diachronically inaccessible
grammars: a diachronic-phonetic study of the English /ai/
alternations. Presentation at the workshop on "Redefining
Elicitation: Novel Data in Phonological Theory", New York
University, April 9-11, 2004).
[Abstract]
[Handout (pdf)]
Work done in collaboration with Erik R. Thomas, North Carolina
State University.
- Moreton, Elliott (2004). Phonotactic constraints,
frequency, and legality in English onset-cluster perception.
Poster at Acoustical Society of America meeting, New York City, May
24-28, 2004. Abstract in: Journal of the Acoustical Society of
America 115(5, Part 2):2630.
[Abstract]
[Poster (pdf)]
[References (pdf).]
- Moreton, Elliott (2004). Realization of the English
postvocalic [voice] contrast in F1 and F2. Journal of
Phonetics 32:1-33.
[Abstract]
[Stimuli for Experiments 2 and 3.]
- Moreton, Elliott (2004). Non-computable functions in
Optimality Theory. In: John J. McCarthy (ed.), Optimality
Theory in Phonology, 141-164.
[Abstract]
[Early and rather buggy draft in pdf.]
- Moreton, Elliott (2002). Structural constraints in the
perception of English stop-sonorant clusters. Cognition
84:55-71.
[Abstract]
[Manuscript (pdf)]
[Stimuli for Experiments 1 and 2.]
- Moreton, Elliott, and Paul Smolensky (2002). Typological
consequences of local constraint conjunction. In: L. Mikkelsen
and C. Potts (eds.), Proceedings of the West Coast Conference on
Formal Linguistics 21:306-319.
[Abstract]
[
Paper (pdf).]
- Moreton, Elliott (2002). Phonological grammar in speech
perception. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst.
[pdfs]
- Kingston, John, and Elliott Moreton (2001). How do
listeners learn foreign vowel categories: as disjunctive sets,
through selective attention, or as prototypes? In: R. Smits,
J. Kingston, T. M. Nearey, and R. Zondervan (eds.), Proceedings
of the Workshop on Speech Recognition as Pattern Classification,
Nijmegen, The Netherlands, July 11-13, 2001.
[Abstract]
[Paper (pdf)]
- Moreton, Elliott (1999). Evidence for phonological grammar
in speech perception. In: J. J. Ohala, Y. Hasegawa, M. Ohala,
D. Granville, and A. C. Bailey (eds.), Proceedings of the 14th
International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, San Francisco,
pp. 2215-2217.
[Abstract]
[Paper (pdf)]
- Moreton, Elliott, and Shigeaki Amano (1999). Phonotactics
in the perception of Japanese vowel length: Evidence for
long-distance dependencies. Proceedings of the 6th European
Conference on Speech Communication and Technology, Budapest.
[Abstract]
[Paper (pdf)]
- Moreton, Elliott (1999). Raise-/alpha/. Unpublished MS,
Department of Linguistics, University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
(Descriptive and historical notes on the Southern American English
counterpart to Canadian Raising.)
[pdf].
- Kingston, John, and Elliott Moreton (1998). Discovery of
natural categories by non-native listeners. Abstract in: Journal of the Acoustical Society of
America 103(5, Part 2):2986.
- Oviatt, Sharon L., Gina A. Levow, Elliott Moreton, and Margaret
MacEachern (1998). Modeling global and focal hyperarticulation
during human-computer error resolution. Journal of the Acoustical Society of
America 104(5):1-19.
- Moreton, Elliott (1997). Phonotactic rules in speech
perception. Abstract in :
Journal of the Acoustical
Society of America 102(5, Part 2):3091-3092.
- Kusumoto, Kiyomi, and Elliott Moreton (1997). Native
language determines parsing of nonlinguistic rhythmic stimuli.
Abstract in: Journal of the Acoustical Society of
America 102(5, Part 2):3204.
[Poster (pdf)].
Stimuli: You are welcome to download my stimuli (see
"Publications" above) and use them for any non-commercial purpose,
including, of course, experiments of your own. I'd appreciate it if
you kept me posted on what you're doing with them, though.
Last updated 2008 Jan. 18 (F).