Guest Edito's Introduction
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Optimality Theory (OT) was developed in the 1990s by Alan Prince and
Paul Smolensky as a general theory of language and grammar. Crucial for
OT is Smolensky's idea of identifying a connectionist notion of wellformedness
(Harmony) with linguistic well-formedness. In OT a grammar
consists of a set of well-formedness constraints. These constraints apply to
representations of linguistic structures simultaneously. Moreover, they are
soft, which means violable and potentially conflicting. At least an important
subpart of these constraints is assumed to be shared by all languages.
Individual languages rank these universal constraints differently in such a
way that higher-ranked constraints have total dominance over lowerranked
constraints. Possible output candidates for each underlying form
are evaluated by means of these constraint rankings. The output that best
satisfies the constraints is the optimal candidate and will be realized.