Typecraft v2.5
Jump to: navigation, search

Notions of 'feature' in linguistic theory: cross-theoretical and cross-linguistic perspectives

Revision as of 13:12, 4 September 2016 by Lars Hellan (Talk | contribs)


Workshop at SLE 2016, Naples, August 31 – September 3, 2016

Workshop organizers:

Lars Hellan, Andrej Malchukov, Ian Roberts, Michela Cennamo


PAPERS

  • Dorothee Beermann: Features and Domains

Download Dorothee's paper (available)


  • Theresa Biberauer: Emergent features: A minimalist perspective

Download Theresa's paper


  • Walter Bisang: On a functional explanation of features

Download Walter's paper


  • Michela Cennamo: Gradience in semantic features and syntactic change: A case study from the voice domain

Download Michela's paper


  • Greville G. Corbett and Oliver Bond: Why are there four morphosyntactic features?

Download Grev's and Oliver's paper


  • Chiara Gianollo: Semantic and formal features in negation systems: Diachronic implications

Download Chiara's paper


  • Sean Gleason: How necessary is the Case feature in syntactic theory? Considerations from the Latin AcI

Download Sean's paper


  • Andrej Malchukov: Feature interaction and feature hierarchies: A typological account

Download Andrej's paper


  • Wataru Nakamura: A two-tiered theory of Case Features: The case of the Hindi case (Marking) system

Download Wataru's paper


  • Tabea Reiner: A model of TAM semantics

Download Tabea's paper (available)


  • Ian Roberts and Theresa Biberauer: Emergent parameters and pleiotropic formal features

Download Ian's and Theresa's paper


  • Federico Silvagni: A feature that makes the difference: Aspectual concord in romance copular clauses

Download Federico's paper


  • Sandhya Sundaresan: The four-way Person distinction and anaphora

Download Sandhya's paper


  • Akira Watanabe: Number features and numerals

Download Akira's paper


  • Susanne Wurmbrand: Semantic and formal agreement features — Evidence from nominal ellipsis in German

Download Susanne's paper


ORIGINAL CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS

Linguistic frameworks and theories largely agree on what the basic units in languages are – words, sentences, phrases, morphemes, etc. – but differ in how they analyze the behavior of these units. ‘Features’, broadly speaking, means ‘properties’ of the units, where ‘properties’ are conceived partly relative to what is in focus of a given research, partly relative to the formal exposition of the properties. Recently the notion of feature has been the focus of renewed attention (e.g., Corbett 2012; Kibort & Corbett 2010), yet many aspects remain controversial, also due to the fact that the concept of feature and its role differs across different frameworks and linguistic traditions.

Formally speaking, ‘feature structures’ in formal grammars are typically attribute-value matrices, where an attribute (the word ‘feature’ is here often used as equivalent to ‘attribute’) generally indicates a parameter of specification (like ‘tense’), and a value indicates the exact value of a parameter (like ‘present’, for the parameter tense); the ‘matrix’ is constituted by a set of such attribute-value pairs, together characterizing a unit, whose properties often are complex enough to require a set of attribute-value pairs.(See for instance Pollard and Sag 1994, Butt et al. 1999, Bresnan 2001, Copestake 2002, on how these notions are implemented in HPSG and LFG.) Formal operations defined on features in these settings are for instance ‘unification’, and ‘merge’.

In more ‘substantive’ interpretations, features are more conceived as phenomena, such as tense, aspect, case, etc. Although the ‘formal’ and ‘substantive’ uses are of course interrelated, there is thus a potential ambiguity in the term ‘feature’ when used, being either to be understood as an ‘attribute’ relative to a formal setting, or a linguistically interesting property of items. When speaking of interaction between features, this in turn may relate either to how sets of attribute-value pairs in a matrix are formally organized, or to how phenomena are interrelated.

In recent minimalist theory (Chomsky 1995, 2000, 2001) the notion has been linked to that of “interpretability”: the simplest notion of uninterpretable feature is as one which lacks either its attribute or its value (but see Pesetsky & Torrego 2001, 2007 for a different view). Features may interact by forming hierarchies (or feature geometries, to borrow a term from phonology). One thing that mainstream minimalist theory has overlooked, however, is the possibility that certain features may be “deeper”, than others. Here several questions arise: one is the possibility that the notion of pleiotropy from genetics may be useful and, perhaps, more than just a useful analogy (see Biberauer & Roberts 2015). If this idea is correct, then the question which naturally arises is which the allegedly pleiotropic features are. Nearly all frameworks have some place for notions such as Person, Tense, etc., as they are so cross-linguistically common. Hence one central theme of the workshop will be to compare treatments of these linguistic properties across frameworks, especially if they are seen as linguistically significant features.

In typological research, at least the following approaches can be mentioned as relevant to the theme of features:

1) The study of grammaticalization/universality/areality of features, including prominence of certain features in particular languages (e.g., Bhat 1999 distinguishes between aspect-dominated languages with temporal meanings as an implicature, and tense-oriented languages, where tense would be expressed and aspect implicated).

2) Features and universal gram-types in the sense of Bybee/Dahl (e.g., Bybee & Dahl 1989) and more generally, to what extent individual categories are universal or language particular (cf. a discussion between Haspelmath and Newmeyer in Linguistic Typology and Language; Haspelmath 2007, 2010, Newmeyer 2007, 2010).

3) Holistic typologies as “coalitions” of features: on this view certain features tend to co-occur possibly leading to holistic language types (cf., e.g., early work by Czech typologists reviewed by Sgall 1985). More recently holistic typologies have not enjoyed much popularity in typology, butperhapssome basic insights can be recovered from Corbett’s canonical typology (Brown et al 2013) perspective where one also deals with somewhat idealized types.It also lines up with generative work on parametric variation, following work by Baker (1988, 1996), Huang (2015) and Roberts (2012).

4) Local interaction of features, including interaction of morphological features (see, e.g., Malchukov 2011 on “present perfectives” and other infelicitous feature combinations; cf. also Xrakovskij 1996; Plank & Schellinger 1997; Aikhenvald & Dixon 1998), as well as resolution of feature conflicts in syntax (e.g., choice of agreement with coordinate subjects with incommensurable gender values; Corbett 2012).


In view of these various traditions and frameworks, we think there is significant potential in furthering the cross-school understanding of analytic practices pertaining to the notions mentioned, and we therefore invite scholars across frameworks to present or discuss projects and research traditions from the viewpoint of the roles that features and feature representations play in them. Papers on issues in relation to the putatively pleiotropic features Tense, Case and Person are particularly encouraged, likewise presentations of the typological approaches mentioned; papers addressing semantic features are also very much welcome. In conclusion, we stress once more that the workshop topic is formulated intentionally broadly, since one of the goals of the workshop is methodological: to promote a dialogue between typologically minded scholars representing different research traditions.


Submission

Please send preliminary abstracts of no more than 300 words by November 17 to the workshop organizers at: lars.hellan@ntnu.no, malchuko@uni-mainz.de, and igr20@cam.ac.uk.

Abstracts will be evaluated by the organizers, and selected abstracts will accompany the workshop proposal. We will notify you of inclusion in the workshop proposal when we submit it on November 25. We will be notified by December 15 if the proposal is accepted for the SLE meeting (Naples, August 31 – September 3, 2016).

Note that if your abstract is included in the workshop proposal and the workshop is accepted, you will also need to submit a full abstract of up to 500 words to be reviewed by the SLE scientific committee. The deadline for the submission of full abstracts is January 15, 2016. For further information, please refer to the SLE meeting webpage at http://sle2016.eu/call-for-papers.


Bibliography

Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. and Robert Malcolm Ward Dixon. 1998. Dependencies between grammatical systems. Language 74: 56–80.
Baker, M. (1988) Incorporation: A Theory of Grammatical-Function Changing. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 
Baker, M. (1996) ThePolysynthesis Parameter. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press.
Bhat, D.N.S. 1999. The prominence of tense, aspect and mood. Amsterdam: John
Benjamins
Biberauer, T. & I. Roberts (2015) Emergent parameters and syntactic complexity: new perspectives. Talk given at Complexity Workshop,    
University of Trondheim. 
Bresnan, Joan 2001. Lexical Functional Grammar. Oxford: Blackwell.
Brown, Dunstan, Marina Chumakina & Greville G. Corbett (eds.) 2013.Canonical morphology and syntax. Oxford: Oxford University Press
Butt, Miriam, Tracy Holloway King, Maria-Eugenia Nini and Frederique Segond. 1999.  A Grammar-writer's Cookbook. Stanford: CSLI   
Publications.
Bybee, Joan L., and Östen Dahl. 1989. The Creation of Tense and Aspect Systems in the Languages of the World. Studies in Language 13:51-103.
Chomsky, N. (1995) The Minimalist Program. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.
Chomsky, N. (2000) “Minimalist Inquiries: The Framework,” in R. Martin, D. Michaels & J. Uriagereka (eds) Step by Step: Essays on Minimalist 
Syntax in Honor of Howard Lasnik. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, pp. 89-156.
Chomsky, N. (2001) “Derivation by Phase,” in M. Kenstowicz (ed) Ken Hale: A Life in Language. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, pp. 1-52.
Copestake, Ann. 2002. Implementing Typed Feature Structure Grammars. Stanford: CSLI Publications.
Corbett, Greville G. 2012. Features. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Haspelmath, Martin. 2010. Comparative concepts and descriptive categories in crosslinguistic
studies. Language 86.663–87.
Haspelmath, Martin. 2007. Pre-established categories don’t exist: Consequences for
language description and typology. Linguistic Typology 11.119–32.
Huang, C.-T. J.  (2015) ‘On syntactic analyticity and parametric theory’, in Y.-H. Audrey Li, Kibort, Anna and Greville G. Corbett (eds). 2010.  
Features: Perspectives on a Key Notion in Linguistics. Oxford: OUP.
Malchukov, Andrej. 2011. Interaction of Verbal Categories: Resolution of Infelicitous Grammeme Combinations. Linguistics 49: 229–282.
Newmeyer, Frederick J.J. 2007. Linguistic typology requires crosslinguistic formal
categories. Linguistic Typology 11.133–57.
Newmeyer, Frederick. 2010. On comparative concepts and descriptive categories:A reply to Haspelmath. Language, 86: 3, 688-695.
Pesetsky, D. & E. Torrego. (2001) T-to-C movement: causes and consequences. In M. Kenstowicz (ed) Ken Hale: A Life in Language.  
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 495-538.
Pesetsky, D. & E. Torrego. (2007) The syntax of valuation and the interpretability of features. In S. Karimi, V. Samiian & W. Wilkins (eds)  
Phrasal and Clausal Architecture: Syntactic Derivation and Interpretation. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 193-220.
Plank, Frans& Wolfgang Schellinger. 1997. The uneven distribution of genders over numbers: Greenberg Nos. 37 and 45. Linguistic Typology  
1.53–101.
Pollard, C. and Sag, I. 1994. Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Roberts, I. (2012). Macroparameters and Minimalism: A Programme for Comparative
Research. In: C. Galves, S. Cyrino, R. Lopes, F. Sândalo and J. Avelar (eds). 
Parameter Theory and Linguistic Change. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Sgall, Petr. 1995. Prague school typology. In: Masayoshi Shibatani& Theodora Bynon (eds.), Approaches to language Typology, 49-85.  
Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Simpson, Andrew, and W.-T. Dylan Tsai (eds.), Chinese syntactic in cross-linguistic perspective. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1-47.
Xrakovskij, Viktor S. (1996). ‘Grammatičeskiekategoriiglagola: opytteoriivzaimodejstvija’ [Grammatical categories of the verb: towards a theory 
of category interaction]. In Alexander V. Bondarko (ed.), Mežkategorial’nyesvjazi v grammatike, 22–43. St. Petersburg: Nauka.