@article{dd0618e102d24fcaa8397551de8d27b7,
title = "The productivity of a root-initial accenting suffix, [-zu]: Judgement studies",
abstract = "In many languages affixes can assign accents on roots to which they attach. Some previous studies have claimed that accents assigned by affixes universally fall on syllables next to the affixes (Kurisu 2001; Revithiadou 2008). Kawahara and Wolf (2010) document a newly-coined suffix which counterexemplifies this generalization: the new Japanese suffix [-zu] assigns an accent on root-initial syllables. This paper reports five experiments that test the productivity of non-local accentuation of this suffix. The first three experiments show that given four-mora roots, Japanese speakers prefer initial accents in zu-words to those in monomorphemic words. However, when zu-words are derived from four-mora long roots, speakers prefer default antepenultimate accentuation to initial accentuation. The last two experiments using shorter roots show that speakers assign initial accents to zu-words more often when derived from shorter roots. Overall, the experiments support the initial accenting behavior of [-zu], contributing to the typology of affix-controlled accentuation.",
keywords = "Accents, Experimental phonology, Japanese, Locality, Preaccentuation",
author = "Shigeto Kawahara and Sophia Kao",
note = "Funding Information: Acknowledgements The current research is supported by a Research Council Grant to the first author and a undergraduate research grant from the Aresty office to the second author, both sponsored by Rutgers University. We are grateful to those who helped us distribute our online tests. Experiment IV was conducted at Chuo University and the University of Tokyo, and Experiment V at Sophia University, for which we are grateful to Mutsuto Kawahara, Yuki Hirose, Yukino Kobayashi, and Num-Kim Son. For their comments on this project, we are grateful to the members of the Rutgers Optimality Research Group and those of the Rutgers Psycholinguistics lab and Phonetics Lab, especially Kelly Garvey, Lara Greenberg, Shanna Lichtman, Julien Musolino, Alan Prince, and Kristen Syrett as well as the audience at Formal Approaches to Japanese Linguistics V, at UC Santa Cruz. Osamu Fujimura, Kelly Garvey, Mikio Giriko, Manami Hirayama, Audrey Krum, Haruo Kubozono, Seunghun Lee, Takao Ohshita, Jeremy Perkins, Matt Wolf, and Kyoko Yamaguchi provided thoughtful comments on different instantiations of this project. Finally three anonymous reviewers of NLLT and Junko It{\^o} provided us with very constructive suggestions of a previous version of this paper, for which we are very grateful. All remaining errors are ours.",
year = "2012",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1007/s11049-011-9132-6",
language = "English",
volume = "30",
pages = "837--857",
journal = "Natural Language and Linguistic Theory",
issn = "0167-806X",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",
number = "3",
}