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Journal of Phonetics, Volume 39
Volume 39, Number 1, January 2011
- Rachel Baker, Melissa Michaud Baese-Berk, Laurent Bonnasse-Gahot, Midam Kim, Kristin J. Van Engen, Ann R. Bradlow:
Word durations in non-native English. 1-17 - Douglas N. Honorof, Jeffrey Weihing, Carol A. Fowler:
Articulatory events are imitated under rapid shadowing. 18-38 - Jill Beckman, Pétur Helgason, Bob McMurray, Catherine Ringen:
Rate effects on Swedish VOT: Evidence for phonological overspecification. 39-49 - Francisco Torreira, Mirjam Ernestus:
Vowel elision in casual French: The case of vowel /e/ in the word c'était. 50-58 - Eunjin Oh:
Effects of speaker gender on voice onset time in Korean stops. 59-67 - Marija Tabain, Gavan Breen:
Central vowels in Central Arrernte: A spectrographic study of a small vowel system. 68-84 - Allard Jongman, Wendy Herd, Mohammad Al-Masri, Joan A. Sereno, Sonja Combest:
Acoustics and perception of emphasis in Urban Jordanian Arabic. 85-95 - Barbara Schuppler, Mirjam Ernestus, Odette Scharenborg, Lou Boves:
Acoustic reduction in conversational Dutch: A quantitative analysis based on automatically generated segmental transcriptions. 96-109 - Bart de Boer:
First formant difference for /i/ and /u/: A cross-linguistic study and an explanation. 110-114 - Bruce L. Smith, Rachel Hayes-Harb:
Individual differences in the perception of final consonant voicing among native and non-native speakers of English. 115-120
Volume 39, Number 2, April 2011
- Jonathan Harrington, Phil Hoole, Felicitas Kleber, Ulrich Reubold:
The physiological, acoustic, and perceptual basis of high back vowel fronting: Evidence from German tense and lax vowels. 121-131 - Kuniko Y. Nielsen:
Specificity and abstractness of VOT imitation. 132-142 - Claudia Kuzla, Mirjam Ernestus:
Prosodic conditioning of phonetic detail in German plosives. 143-155 - Grace E. Oh, Susan Guion-Anderson, Katsura Aoyama, James Emil Flege, Reiko Akahane-Yamada, Tsuneo Yamada:
A one-year longitudinal study of English and Japanese vowel production by Japanese adults and children in an English-speaking setting. 156-167 - Sarah Van Hoof, Jo Verhoeven:
Intrinsic vowel F0, the size of vowel inventories and second language acquisition. 168-177 - Jana Brunner, Susanne Fuchs, Pascal Perrier:
Supralaryngeal control in Korean velar stops. 178-195 - Eunjong Kong, Mary E. Beckman, Jan Edwards:
Why are Korean tense stops acquired so early?: The role of acoustic properties. 196-211 - Lya Meister, Einar Meister:
Perception of the short vs. long phonological category in Estonian by native and non-native listeners. 212-224 - Marco van de Ven, Carlos Gussenhoven:
On the timing of the final rise in Dutch falling-rising intonation contours. 225-236 - Cynthia G. Clopper, Rajka Smiljanic:
Effects of gender and regional dialect on prosodic patterns in American English. 237-245 - Daniel Voyer, Susan D. Voyer:
Perceptual asymmetries and stimulus dominance in dichotic listening with natural fricatives. 246-252
Volume 39, Number 3, July 2011
- Martine Adda-Decker, Natalie D. Snoeren:
Quantifying temporal speech reduction in French using forced speech alignment. 261-270 - Christine Meunier, Robert Espesser:
Vowel reduction in conversational speech in French: The role of lexical factors. 271-278 - Audrey Bürki, Cécile Fougeron, Cédric Gendrot, Ulrich H. Frauenfelder:
Phonetic reduction versus phonological deletion of French schwa: Some methodological issues. 279-288 - Leendert Plug:
Phonetic reduction and informational redundancy in self-initiated self-repair in Dutch. 289-297 - Holger Mitterer:
Recognizing reduced forms: Different processing mechanisms for similar reductions. 298-303 - Mark A. Pitt, Laura Dilley, Michael Tat:
Exploring the role of exposure frequency in recognizing pronunciation variants. 304-311 - Benjamin V. Tucker:
The effect of reduction on the processing of flaps and /g/ in isolated words. 312-318 - Oliver Niebuhr, Klaus J. Kohler:
Perception of phonetic detail in the identification of highly reduced words. 319-329
- Esther Janse, Mirjam Ernestus:
The roles of bottom-up and top-down information in the recognition of reduced speech: Evidence from listeners with normal and impaired hearing. 330-343 - Taehong Cho, Yoon-Jeong Lee, Sahyang Kim:
Communicatively driven versus prosodically driven hyper-articulation in Korean. 344-361 - Ingo Plag, Gero Kunter, Mareile Schramm:
Acoustic correlates of primary and secondary stress in North American English. 362-374 - Ruth E. Cumming:
The effect of dynamic fundamental frequency on the perception of duration. 375-387 - Alejandrina Cristià, Grant McGuire, Amanda Seidl, Alexander L. Francis:
Effects of the distribution of acoustic cues on infants' perception of sibilants. 388-402 - Jeff Mielke, Kenneth S. Olson, Adam Baker, Diana Archangeli:
Articulation of the Kagayanen interdental approximant: An ultrasound study. 403-412 - Marion Jaeger, Philip Hoole:
Articulatory factors influencing regressive place assimilation across word boundaries in German. 413-428 - Oliver Niebuhr, Meghan Clayards, Christine Meunier, Leonardo Lancia:
On place assimilation in sibilant sequences - Comparing French and English. 429-451
Volume 39, Number 4, October 2011
- Catherine T. Best, Ann R. Bradlow, Susan Guion-Anderson, Linda Polka:
Using the lens of phonetic experience to resolve phonological forms. 453-455 - Winifred Strange:
Automatic selective perception (ASP) of first and second language speech: A working model. 456-466 - Linda Polka, Ocke-Schwen Bohn:
Natural Referent Vowel (NRV) framework: An emerging view of early phonetic development. 467-478 - Andrea Weber, Mirjam Broersma, Makiko Aoyagi:
Spoken-word recognition in foreign-accented speech by L2 listeners. 479-491 - Suzanne Curtin, Krista Byers-Heinlein, Janet F. Werker:
Bilingual beginnings as a lens for theory development: PRIMIR in focus. 492-504 - Megha Sundara, Adrienne Scutellaro:
Rhythmic distance between languages affects the development of speech perception in bilingual infants. 505-513 - Laura Bosch, Marta Ramon-Casas:
Variability in vowel production by bilingual speakers: Can input properties hinder the early stabilization of contrastive categories? 514-526 - Valerie L. Shafer, Yan H. Yu, Hia Datta:
The development of English vowel perception in monolingual and bilingual infants: Neurophysiological correlates. 527-545 - Adrian Garcia-Sierra, Maritza Rivera-Gaxiola, Cherie R. Percaccio, Barbara T. Conboy, Harriett Romo, Lindsay Klarman, Sophia Ortiz, Patricia K. Kuhl:
Bilingual language learning: An ERP study relating early brain responses to speech, language input, and later word production. 546-557
- Mark Antoniou, Catherine T. Best, Michael D. Tyler, Christian Kroos:
Inter-language interference in VOT production by L2-dominant bilinguals: Asymmetries in phonetic code-switching. 558-570 - Erin M. Ingvalson, James L. McClelland, Lori L. Holt:
Predicting native English-like performance by native Japanese speakers. 571-584 - Bettina Braun, Elizabeth K. Johnson:
Question or tone 2? How language experience and linguistic function guide pitch processing. 585-594 - Bei Wang, Yi Xu:
Differential prosodic encoding of topic and focus in sentence-initial position in Mandarin Chinese. 595-611 - Yiya Chen:
How does phonology guide phonetics in segment-f0 interaction? 612-625 - Hyunsoon Kim, Shinji Maeda, Kiyoshi Honda:
The laryngeal characterization of Korean fricatives: Stroboscopic cine-MRI data. 626-641 - Sam Tilsen:
Effects of syllable stress on articulatory planning observed in a stop-signal experiment. 642-659 - Ryan K. Shosted:
An articulatory-aerodynamic approach to stop excrescence. 660-667 - Christopher Carignan, Ryan Shosted, Chilin Shih, Panying Rong:
Compensatory articulation in American English nasalized vowels. 668-682 - Ewa Jacewicz, Robert Allen Fox, Joseph Salmons:
Vowel change across three age groups of speakers in three regional varieties of American English. 683-693 - Katie Drager:
Sociophonetic variation and the lemma. 694-707
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