Phonological Knowledge

Phonological Knowledge: Conceptual and Empirical Issues is a 2000 book edited by Noel Burton-Roberts, Philip Carr and Gerard Docherty in which the authors deal with different approaches to describing and explaining the nature of phonological knowledge in the speaker’s grammar.

Reception
The book was reviewed by Ricardo Bermúdez-Otero, Michael B. Maxwell and Yen-Hwei Lin.

Essays

 * Introduction, Noel Burton-Roberts, Philip Carr, and Gerard Docherty
 * The Ontology of Phonology, Sylvain Bromberger and Morris Halle
 * Where and What is Phonology? A representational perspective, Noel Burton-Roberts
 * Scientific Realism, Sociophonetic Variation, and Innate Endowments in Phonology, Philip Carr
 * Speaker, Speech, and Knowledge of Sounds, Gerard Docherty and Paul Foulkes
 * Phonology and Phonetics in Psycholinguistic Models of Speech Perception, Jennifer Fitzpatrick and Linda Wheeldon
 * Phonology as Cognition, Mark Hale and Charles Reiss
 * Vowel Patterns in Mind and Sound, John Harris and Geoff Lindsey
 * Boundary Disputes: The distinction between phonetic and phonological sound patterns, Scott Myers
 * Conceptual Foundations of Phonology as a Laboratory Science, Janet Pierrehumbert, Mary Beckman, Bob Ladd
 * Modularity and Modality in Phonology, Harry van der Hulst
 * Phonetics and the Origin of Phonology, Marilyn Vihman and Shelley Velleman