Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
Much recent research in cognitive and brain sciences links speech processing to the auditory and articulatory systems. These facts notwithstanding, here, I argue that phonology is abstract, algebraic, and substance-free. I first review challenges to this hypothesis and explain why it remains a viable possibility. I next suggest that an algebraic, substance-free phonology confers adaptive benefits; and finally, I support this proposal by evidence from three case studies. Using the restrictions on onset structure (e.g., bnif>bdif>lbif), I show that the phonological constraints on syllable structure are inexplicable by auditory and articulatory pressures; hence, they are abstract. A second case, from identity restrictions, suggests that phonological constraints are algebraic, as speakers generalize them to features that are unattested in their language; this is the case in both Hebrew and American Sign Language (ASL). Finally, I show that sign-language-naïve speakers—both adults and infants—freely extend their knowledge of spoken-language phonology to ASL signs, suggesting that phonological knowledge is partly amodal. I conclude that phonological grammar is substance-free.
Iris Berent (Fri,) studied this question.