Journal: J. Phonetics

Volume 39, Issue 2

121 -- 131Jonathan 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
132 -- 142Kuniko Y. Nielsen. Specificity and abstractness of VOT imitation
143 -- 155Claudia Kuzla, Mirjam Ernestus. Prosodic conditioning of phonetic detail in German plosives
156 -- 167Grace 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
168 -- 177Sarah Van Hoof, Jo Verhoeven. Intrinsic vowel F0, the size of vowel inventories and second language acquisition
178 -- 195Jana Brunner, Susanne Fuchs, Pascal Perrier. Supralaryngeal control in Korean velar stops
196 -- 211Eunjong Kong, Mary E. Beckman, Jan Edwards. Why are Korean tense stops acquired so early?: The role of acoustic properties
212 -- 224Lya Meister, Einar Meister. Perception of the short vs. long phonological category in Estonian by native and non-native listeners
225 -- 236Marco van de Ven, Carlos Gussenhoven. On the timing of the final rise in Dutch falling-rising intonation contours
237 -- 245Cynthia G. Clopper, Rajka Smiljanic. Effects of gender and regional dialect on prosodic patterns in American English
246 -- 252Daniel Voyer, Susan D. Voyer. Perceptual asymmetries and stimulus dominance in dichotic listening with natural fricatives