This section outlines the ten articles included in this book, focusing on their research methods or phonological analyses.The titles of the following subsections are those of the articles. Sentence Stress in Presidential SpeechesAnttila et al. examine the relation between prosodic prominence and other factors such as syntax and informativity, by analyzing the fi rst inaugural address of six U.S. presidents.They compare the perceived stress contours obtained from sound data, and the predicted stress contours obtained by the analyses of text data.The text data is analyzed using sentence stress rules (i.e. the Nuclear Stress Rule and the Compound Stress Rule in Chomsky and Halle ( 1968)) and certain informativity measures (i.e., which is the average predictability of a word across an entire corpus).The stress predicted by the former analysis is called , and that predicted by the latter is called in this paper.Based on the comparison, Anttila et al. show that perceived stress contours correspond both to the and to the .Furthermore, they observe a stress hierarchy (function word < verb < adjective < noun), and reveal that noun and adjective stresses are loud and , while verb and function word stresses are soft and -.They speculate that the sentence stress may explain "phonological privilege," which is a part-of-speech eff ect in word phonology independently discovered by Smith (2011: 2439). German Case Ambiguities at the Interface: Production and ComprehensionBgel presents a formal model within the framework of Lexical-Functional Grammar (Kaplan and Bresnan (1985)), which is special in that it models both syntax-prosody mapping in production, and prosody-syntax mapping in comprehension.She assumes that linguistic architecture consists of three modules (syntax, multidimensional lexicon, and phonology/ prosody), and that they are connected by means of two mapping processes, transfer of vocabulary and transfer of structure.Transfer of vocabulary is the process at the word-level or below, and it exchanges morphosyntactic information (s(yntactic)-form) and prosodic information (p(honological)form) via a multidimensional lexicon.The lexicon consists of syntactic and prosodic (and semantic) information, and access to one of these types of information (from c(onstituent)-structure and p(rosodic)-structure) activates
SHOGO SAITO (Mon,) studied this question.