Journal: Phonetica

Volume 69, Issue 4

193 -- 215Scott Moisik. Harsh Voice Quality and Its Association with Blackness in Popular American Media
216 -- 230Constantijn Kaland, Emiel Krahmer, Marc Swerts. On How Accent Distribution Can Signal Speaker Adaptation
231 -- 253Margaret Zellers. Prosodic Variation for Topic Shift and Other Functions in Local Contrasts in Conversation
254 -- 273Klaus J. Kohler. Ladd, D.R.: Phonetics in Phonology; in Goldsmith, Riggle, Yu, The Handbook of Phonological Theory; 2nd ed., pp. 348-373 (Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester 2011)

Volume 69, Issue 3

109 -- 123Connor Mayer, Bryan Gick. Talking while Chewing: Speaker Response to Natural Perturbation of Speech
124 -- 148Francisco Torreira, Mirjam Ernestus. Weakening of Intervocalic /s/ in the Nijmegen Corpus of Casual Spanish
149 -- 179Patricio Carrasco, José Ignacio Hualde, Miguel Simonet. Dialectal Differences in Spanish Voiced Obstruent Allophony: Costa Rican versus Iberian Spanish
180 -- 190Donna Erickson, Atsuo Suemitsu, Yoshiho Shibuya, Mark Tiede. Metrical Structure and Production of English Rhythm

Volume 69, Issue 1-2

5 -- 6Klaus J. Kohler. Bridging the Segment-Prosody Divide in Speech Production and Perception
7 -- 27Oliver Niebuhr. At the Edge of Intonation: The Interplay of Utterance-Final F0 Movements and Voiceless Fricative Sounds
28 -- 47Anastasia Karlsson, David House, Jan-Olof Svantesson. Intonation Adapts to Lexical Tone: The Case of Kammu
48 -- 67Richard Ogden. Making Sense of Outliers
68 -- 93Klaus J. Kohler. The Perception of Lexical Stress in German: Effects of Segmental Duration and Vowel Quality in Different Prosodic Patterns
94 -- 107Johanneke Caspers, Katarzyna Horloza. Intelligibility of Non-Natively Produced Dutch Words: Interaction between Segmental and Suprasegmental Errors