Abstract is missing.
- Conceptions of disfluenciesHerbert H. Clark. [doi]
- Disfluency in speech: the listener's perspectiveMartin Corley. [doi]
- Disfluency and discursive markers: when prosody and syntax plan discourseJulie Beliao, Anne Lacheret. 5-8 [doi]
- Pauses following fillers in L1 and L2 German map task dialoguesMalte Belz, Myriam Klapi. 9-12 [doi]
- HESITA(tions) in Portuguese: a databaseSara Candeias, Dirce Celorico, Jorge Proença, Arlindo Veiga, Fernando Perdigão. 13-16 [doi]
- Choosing a threshold for silent pauses to measure second language fluencyNivja H. De Jong, Hans Rutger Bosker. 17-20 [doi]
- Lengthenings aand filled pauses in Hungarian adults' and children's speechAndrea Deme, Alexandra Markó. 21-24 [doi]
- Anti-zero pronominalization: when Japanese speakers overtly express omissible topic phrasesYasuharu Den, Natsuko Nakagawa. 25-28 [doi]
- Self-repairs in German children's peer interaction - initial explorationsLaura E. de Ruiter. 29-32 [doi]
- Self-addressed questions in disfluenciesJonathan Ginzburg, Raquel Fernández, David Schlangen. 33-36 [doi]
- Acoustic and linguistics features related to speech planning appearing at weak clause boundaries in Japanese monologsHanae Koiso, Yasuharu Den. 37-40 [doi]
- 0 height of filled pauses in spontaneous Japanese: a preliminary reportKikuo Maekawa. 41-44 [doi]
- Analysis of parenthetical clauses in spontaneous JapaneseTakehiko Maruyama. 45-48 [doi]
- Automatic structural metadata identification based on multilayer prosodic informationHelena Moniz, Fernando Batista, Isabel Trancoso, Ana Isabel Mata. 49-52 [doi]
- Which kind of hesitations can be found in Estonian spontaneous speech?Rena Nemoto. 53-54 [doi]
- Self-monitoring as reflected in identification of misspoken segmentsSieb G. Nooteboom, Hugo Quené. 55-57 [doi]
- Catogorizing syntactic chunks for marking disfluent speech in French languageKlim Peshkov, Laurent Prévot, Stéphane Rauzy, Berthille Pallaud. 59-62 [doi]
- Acoustical characterization of vocalic fillers in European PortugueseJorge Proença, Dirce Celorico, Arlindo Veiga, Sara Candeias, Fernando Perdigão. 63-66 [doi]
- The linguistic role of hesitation disfluencies: evidence from Hebrew and JapaneseVered Silber-Varod, Takehiko Maruyama. 67-70 [doi]
- Phrasal complexity and the occurrence of filled pauses in presentation speeches in JapaneseMichiko Watanabe. 71-72 [doi]
- Disfluencies and uncertainty perception - evidence from a human - machine scenarioCharlotte Wollermann, Eva Lasarcyk, Ulrich Schade, Bernhard Schröder. 73-76 [doi]