Key research themes
1. How do quantifiable articulatory and acoustical parameters define universal vowel system structures across languages?
This theme investigates the universal tendencies in vowel system inventories by analyzing the physical and perceptual constraints shaping vowel production and perception. It synthesizes large linguistic databases with articulatory and acoustic modeling to understand the preferred vowel positions, system economy, and typological distribution of vowel qualities. Understanding these parameters is crucial for creating predictive models and theoretical frameworks of vowel system organization rooted in human speech physiology and auditory perception.
2. What are the cognitive and phonological mechanisms governing vowel inventory composition and vowel system evolution?
This theme focuses on the cognitive constraints, learnability factors, historical evolution, and phonological processes shaping vowel system inventory size, composition, and distribution across languages. It critically evaluates theories such as Dispersion Theory and Evolutionary Phonology to explain how vowel systems emerge, stabilize, and change diachronically and synchronically, emphasizing the interaction between innate processing constraints and external linguistic/environmental factors.
3. How do phonological features and segmental categorization differentiate vowels from consonants and influence vowel processing in language acquisition and phonology?
This theme examines the distinct roles and natural classes of vowels versus consonants in phonological theory, cognitive processing, and language acquisition. It explores feature-based classification systems and the functional division of labor between vowels and consonants, shedding light on their differential contributions to lexical encoding, morphosyntactic structuring, and speech perception.