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Journal of Phonetics, Volume 38
Volume 38, Number 1, January 2010
- Pierre A. Hallé:
Obituary: George Nick Clements. 1-2 - George N. Clements, Pierre A. Hallé:
"Phonetic bases of distinctive features": Introduction. 3-9
- Kenneth N. Stevens, Samuel Jay Keyser:
Quantal theory, enhancement and overlap. 10-19 - Steven M. Lulich:
Subglottal resonances and distinctive features. 20-32 - Kiyoshi Honda, Sayoko Takano, Hironori Takemoto:
Effects of side cavities and tongue stabilization: Possible extensions of the quantal theory. 33-43
- Aditi Lahiri, Henning Reetz:
Distinctive features: Phonological underspecification in representation and processing. 44-59 - Sarah Hawkins:
Phonological features, auditory objects, and illusions. 60-89
- Hyunsoon Kim, Shinji Maeda, Kiyoshi Honda:
Invariant articulatory bases of the features [tense] and [spread glottis] in Korean plosives: New stroboscopic cine-MRI data. 90-108 - Catherine T. Best, Pierre A. Hallé:
Perception of initial obstruent voicing is influenced by gestural organization. 109-126 - Keith Johnson, Molly Babel:
On the perceptual basis of distinctive features: Evidence from the perception of fricatives by Dutch and English speakers. 127-136
Volume 38, Number 2, April 2010
- Susan G. Guion, Jonathan D. Amith, Christopher S. Doty, Irina Shport:
Word-level prosody in Balsas Nahuatl: The origin, development, and acoustic correlates of tone in a stress accent language. 137-166 - Jennifer Cole, Gary Linebaugh, Cheyenne Munson, Bob McMurray:
Unmasking the acoustic effects of vowel-to-vowel coarticulation: A statistical modeling approach. 167-184 - Felicitas Kleber, Tina John, Jonathan Harrington:
The implications for speech perception of incomplete neutralization of final devoicing in German. 185-196 - Marc Swerts, Emiel Krahmer:
Visual prosody of newsreaders: Effects of information structure, emotional content and intended audience on facial expressions. 197-206 - Marzena Zygis, Jaye Padgett:
A perceptual study of Polish fricatives, and its implications for historical sound change. 207-226 - Travis Wade, Grzegorz Dogil, Hinrich Schütze, Michael Walsh, Bernd Möbius:
Syllable frequency effects in a context-sensitive segment production model. 227-239 - James M. Scobbie, Marianne Pouplier:
The role of syllable structure in external sandhi: An EPG study of vocalisation and retraction in word-final English /l/. 240-259 - Yanhong Zhang, Alexander L. Francis:
The weighting of vowel quality in native and non-native listeners' perception of English lexical stress. 260-271 - Lisa Davidson:
Phonetic bases of similarities in cross-language production: Evidence from English and Catalan. 272-288 - Maria-Josep Solé:
Effects of syllable position on sound change: An aerodynamic study of final fricative weakening. 289-305 - Christina M. Esposito:
The effects of linguistic experience on the perception of phonation. 306-316 - Martha E. Tyrone, Claude E. Mauk:
Sign lowering and phonetic reduction in American Sign Language. 317-328
Volume 38, Number 3, July 2010
- Yi Xu:
In defense of lab speech. 329-336 - David J. Broad, Frantz Clermont:
Target-locus scaling methods for modeling families of formant transitions. 337-359 - Kikuo Maekawa:
Coarticulatory reinterpretation of allophonic variation: Corpus-based analysis of /z/ in spontaneous Japanese. 360-374 - Khalil Iskarous:
Vowel constrictions are recoverable from formants. 375-387 - Lasse Bombien, Christine Mooshammer, Philip Hoole, Barbara Kühnert:
Prosodic and segmental effects on EPG contact patterns of word-initial German clusters. 388-403 - Andries W. Coetzee, Rigardt Pretorius:
Phonetically grounded phonology and sound change: The case of Tswana labial plosives. 404-421 - Sharon Peperkamp, Inga Vendelin, Emmanuel Dupoux:
Perception of predictable stress: A cross-linguistic investigation. 422-430 - Bettina Braun, Aoju Chen:
Intonation of 'now' in resolving scope ambiguity in English and Dutch. 431-444 - Roger W. Steeve:
Babbling and chewing: Jaw kinematics from 8 to 22 months. 445-458 - Laurence White, Alice Turk:
English words on the Procrustean bed: Polysyllabic shortening reconsidered. 459-471 - Heike Lehnert-LeHouillier:
A cross-linguistic investigation of cues to vowel length perception. 472-482 - Olga Dmitrieva, Allard Jongman, Joan A. Sereno:
Phonological neutralization by native and non-native speakers: The case of Russian final devoicing. 483-492
Volume 38, Number 4, October 2010
- Victoria Medina, Ingrid Hoonhorst, Caroline Bogliotti, Willy Serniclaes:
Development of voicing perception in French: Comparing adults, adolescents, and children. 493-503 - Wendy Herd, Allard Jongman, Joan A. Sereno:
An acoustic and perceptual analysis of /t/ and /d/ flaps in American English. 504-516 - Yiya Chen:
Post-focus F0 compression - Now you see it, now you don't. 517-525 - Emmanuel Ferragne, François Pellegrino:
Vowel systems and accent similarity in the British Isles: Exploiting multidimensional acoustic distances in phonetics. 526-539 - Robert Kirchner, Roger K. Moore, Tsung-Ying Chen:
Computing phonological generalization over real speech exemplars. 540-547 - Katarina L. Haley, Elizabeth Seelinger, Kerry Callahan Mandulak, David J. Zajac:
Evaluating the spectral distinction between sibilant fricatives through a speaker-centered approach. 548-554 - Mattias Heldner, Jens Edlund:
Pauses, gaps and overlaps in conversations. 555-568 - Maria V. Kondaurova, Alexander L. Francis:
The role of selective attention in the acquisition of English tense and lax vowels by native Spanish listeners: Comparison of three training methods. 569-587 - Jody Kreiman, Bruce R. Gerratt, Sameer ud Dowla Khan:
Effects of native language on perception of voice quality. 588-593 - W. F. L. Heeren, M. E. H. Schouten:
Perceptual development of the Finnish /t-tː/ distinction in Dutch 12-year-old children: A training study. 594-603 - Maria-Josep Solé, Larry M. Hyman, Kemmonye C. Monaka:
More on post-nasal devoicing: The case of Shekgalagari. 604-615 - Gang Peng, Hongying Zheng, Tao Gong, Ruo-Xiao Yang, Jiangping Kong, William S.-Y. Wang:
The influence of language experience on categorical perception of pitch contours. 616-624 - Khalil Iskarous, Darya Kavitskaya:
The interaction between contrast, prosody, and coarticulation in structuring phonetic variability. 625-639 - Mark Antoniou, Catherine T. Best, Michael D. Tyler, Christian Kroos:
Language context elicits native-like stop voicing in early bilinguals' productions in both L1 and L2. 640-653 - Ratree Wayland, Elizabeth Herrera, Edith Kaan:
Effects of musical experience and training on pitch contour perception. 654-662 - Miquel Simonet:
Dark and clear laterals in Catalan and Spanish: Interaction of phonetic categories in early bilinguals. 663-678 - Bart de Boer:
Investigating the acoustic effect of the descended larynx with articulatory models. 679-686 - Pilar Prieto, Eva Estebas-Vilaplana, María del Mar Vanrell:
The relevance of prosodic structure in tonal articulation Edge effects at the prosodic word level in Catalan and Spanish. 687-705 - Maria I. Grigos, Rupal Patel:
Acquisition of articulatory control for sentential focus in children. 706-715 - Yanhong Zhang, Alexander L. Francis:
Corrigendum to "The weighting of vowel quality in native and non-native listeners' perception of English Lexical Stress" [Journal of Phonetics 38 (2010) 260-271]. 716
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