Abstract is missing.
- On the robustness of Speech PerceptionRandy L. Diehl. 1-8 [doi]
- Does Phonetic Detail Guide Situation-specific Speech Recognition?Sarah Hawkins. 9-18 [doi]
- On the Interdependence of Sounds and Prosodies in Communicative FunctionsKlaus J. Kohler. 19-27 [doi]
- Phonological Complexity in Linguistic PatterningIan Maddieson. 28-34 [doi]
- Speech DynamicsLouis C. W. Pols. 35-43 [doi]
- Linguistic Phonetics: A Look into the FutureDaniel Recasens. 44-51 [doi]
- On the Acoustic and Perceptual Characterization of Reference Vowels in a Cross-language PerspectiveJacqueline Vaissière. 52-59 [doi]
- The Influence of Aerodynamic Constraints on the Shape and the Dynamics of Phonological SystemsDidier Demolin. 60-63 [doi]
- Accommodation to the Aerodynamic Voicing Constraint and its Phonological RelevanceJohn J. Ohala. 64-67 [doi]
- An EMA-Aerodynamic Approach to the Velic Opening Hypothesis: Evidence from Hindi Vowel PairsRyan K. Shosted. 68-71 [doi]
- Voice-initiating Gestures in Spanish: PrenasalizationMaria-Josep Solé, Ronald L. Sprouse. 72-75 [doi]
- Phonetic Fieldwork in the Pacific NorthwestSonya Bird. 76-79 [doi]
- Perception in the FieldMarc Brunelle. 80-83 [doi]
- Aerodynamic Techniques for Phonetic FieldworkDidier Demolin. 84-87 [doi]
- Laryngoscopic Fieldwork: A GuideJerold A. Edmondson, Yueh-Chin Chang, Feng-fan Hsieh, Hui-chuan J. Huang. 88-91 [doi]
- English Language Teaching and the Lingua Franca Core in East AsiaDavid H. Deterding. 92-95 [doi]
- Phonetics Teaching and Learning: An Overview of Recent Trends and DirectionsJose A. Mompeán, Michael Ashby, Helen Fraser. 96-99 [doi]
- The Youtube Revolution: Engagement, Perception and IdentityJoanna Smith. 100-103 [doi]
- Cross-modal Reinforcements in Phonetics Teaching and Learning: An Overview of Innovative Trends in Pronunciation PedagogyMagdalena Wrembel. 104-107 [doi]
- 0 Contours: Evidence from Scaling Perception in American EnglishJonathan Barnes, Alejna Brugos, Nanette Veilleux, Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel. 108-111 [doi]
- The Phonetic Specification of Contour Tones: The Rising Tone in MandarinHyesun Cho, Edward Flemming. 112-115 [doi]
- Porteño Nuclear AccentsIngo Feldhausen, Andrea Pesková, Elena Kireva, Christoph Gabriel. 116-119 [doi]
- Are There "Shapers" and "Aligners"? Individual Differences in Signalling Pitch Accent CategoryOliver Niebuhr, Mariapaola D'Imperio, Barbara Gili Fivela, Francesco Cangemi. 120-123 [doi]
- Analysing Tongue Shape and Movement in Vowel Production Using SS ANOVA in Ultrasound ImagingYu Chen, Hua Lin. 124-127 [doi]
- Ultrasound Study of Gestural Timing in Mandarin Vowel-Nasal ProductionYa Li, Sonya Bird. 128-131 [doi]
- Synchronizing Video, Ultrasound, and Audio with a Water BalloonThomas Magnuson, Christopher Coey. 132-135 [doi]
- Evaluating Laryngeal Ultrasound to Study Larynx State and HeightScott Moisik, John H. Esling, Sonya Bird, Hua Lin. 136-139 [doi]
- Phonetic Realization of Focus with No On-focus Pitch Range Expansion in TurkishCanan Ipek. 140-143 [doi]
- Prosodic Realization of Focus in Six Languages/Dialects in ChinaBei Wang, Ling Wang, Tursun Qadir. 144-147 [doi]
- Post-focus Compression in English-Cantonese Bilingual SpeakersWing Li Wu, Lisa Chung. 148-151 [doi]
- Post-focus Compression: Cross-linguistic Distribution and Historical OriginYi Xu. 152-155 [doi]
- Christian Gottlieb Kratzenstein: Pioneer in Speech SynthesisJohn J. Ohala. 156-159 [doi]
- Historical Development of Phonetic Vowel Systems - The Last 400 YearsHartmut R. Pfitzinger, Oliver Niebuhr. 160-163 [doi]
- Wolfgang von Kempelen's 'Speaking Machine' as an Instrument for Demonstration and ResearchJürgen Trouvain, Fabian Brackhane. 164-167 [doi]
- Film from a Phonetics Laboratory of the 1920sMichael Ashby. 168-171 [doi]
- From Stomatoscopy to BEA: The History of Hungarian Experimental PhoneticsMária Gósy. 172-175 [doi]
- Measuring the Accuracy of Historic Phonetic InstrumentsRüdiger Hoffmann, Dieter Mehnert, Rolf Dietzel. 176-179 [doi]
- Estimates for the Measurement and Articulatory Error in MRI Data from Sustained Vowel ProductionDaniel Aalto, Jarmo Malinen, Martti Vainio, Jani Saunavaara, Pertti Palo. 180-183 [doi]
- Effects of Form-focused Instruction on the Acquisition of Weak Forms by Japanese EFL LearnersHideki Abe. 184-187 [doi]
- A Pitch Accent Position Contrast in PersianVahideh Abolhasani Zadeh, Carlos Gussenhoven, Mahmood Bijankhan. 188-191 [doi]
- Effects of Speaker Evaluation on Phonetic ConvergenceCarissa Abrego-Collier, Julian Grove, Morgan Sonderegger, Alan C. L. Yu. 192-195 [doi]
- Studying Luxembourgish Phonetics via Multilingual Forced AlignmentsMartine Adda-Decker, Lori Lamel, Natalie D. Snoeren. 196-199 [doi]
- Oral-Nasal Vowel Contrasts: New Perspectives on a Debated QuestionKofi Adu Manyah. 200-203 [doi]
- CV Coarticulation in Yoruba - A Tonal LanguageAugustine Agwuele, Harvey M. Sussman. 204-207 [doi]
- Problems for Foreigners in Producing Arabic Sounds and a Guide for Helping Them, with a Special Focus on Native Korean SpeakersJoshua Ahn. 208-211 [doi]
- Multiple Cues for the Singleton-Geminate Contrast in Lebanese Arabic: Acoustic Investigation of Stops and FricativesJalal Al-Tamimi, Ghada Khattab. 212-215 [doi]
- Identity and Ethnicity in /t/ in Glasgow-Pakistani High-school GirlsFarhana Alam, Jane Stuart-Smith. 216-219 [doi]
- On the Interpretation of Consonant-Vowel Co-occurrence Frequency BiasesEleonora C. Albano. 220-223 [doi]
- Regional Accent Accommodation in Spontaneous Speech: Evidence for Long-term Accent Change?Wafaa Alshangiti, Bronwen G. Evans. 224-227 [doi]
- Perception and Production Boundaries between Fricative [s] and Affricate [ts] in JapaneseShigeaki Amano, Kimiko Yamakawa. 228-231 [doi]
- Perceptual Cues to Different Degrees of Phonetic Prominence in Large Units of SpeechEkaterina Amelina. 232-235 [doi]
- Realisation of the Prosodic Structure of Spoken Telephone Numbers by Native and Non-native Speakers of JapaneseKanae Amino, Takashi Osanai. 236-239 [doi]
- The Acoustic Correlates of Tongue Root Vowel Harmony in Even (Tungusic)Natalia Aralova, Sven Grawunder, Bodo Winter. 240-243 [doi]
- Acoustic Description of Quebec French High Vowels: First ResultsVincent Arnaud, Caroline Sigouin, Johanna-Pascale Roy. 244-247 [doi]
- Multiple Prosodic Parameters Signaling Information Structure: Parallel Focus Marking in FinnishAnja Arnhold. 248-251 [doi]
- Evaluating Different Rating Scales for Obtaining Judgments of Syllable Prominence from Naïve ListenersDenis Arnold, Petra Wagner, Bernd Möbius. 252-255 [doi]
- Nasal Heads or Nasal Tails? A Pan Lusophone Survey of Preconsonantal MurmurSimone Ashby, Fred Cummins, Sílvia Barbosa, Neuza Campaniço. 256-259 [doi]
- Perceptual Dimensions of Nonnative SpeechEriko Atagi, Tessa Bent. 260-263 [doi]
- Perception of Speech Rate and Naturalness in Synthetic Slow SpeechCyril Auran, Caroline Bouzon. 264-267 [doi]
- Typological Variations in the Realization of the French Accentual PhraseMathieu Avanzi, Guri Bordal, Nicolas Obin. 268-271 [doi]
- On the Interrelation of Rhythm and Phrasal Accent: A Contrastive StudySeda A. Bagdasarian, Lusine V. Vanyan. 272-275 [doi]
- Differential Contribution of Prosodic Cues in Native and Non-native Speech SegmentationCarly L. Bahler, Caitlin E. Coughlin, Annie Tremblay. 276-279 [doi]
- Glottal Stops Produced by Polish Native Speakers in Polish and in EnglishAnna Balas. 280-283 [doi]
- OCP Effects in TeluguRahul Balusu. 284-287 [doi]
- Which Parameters Signal Accentuation?William J. Barry, Bistra Andreeva. 288-291 [doi]
- Articulatory Conflict and Laryngeal HeightMatt Bauer. 292-295 [doi]
- Interpreting the Scope of Negation in Three Varieties of German - The Effect of Prosodic CuesStefan Baumann, Tamara Rathcke. 296-299 [doi]
- Methodological Issues in the Analysis of Phonotactic Probability Effects in NonwordsMary E. Beckman, Benjamin Munson, Jan Edwards. 300-303 [doi]
- Gestural Control of Real Time Concatenative SynthesisGrégory Beller. 304-307 [doi]
- The Relationship between Laryngeal Constriction and Vowel Quality in Infants Learning English and BaiAllison Benner, Izabelle Grenon. 308-311 [doi]
- English Listeners' Knowledge of the Broad versus Narrow Focus ContrastJason B. Bishop. 312-315 [doi]
- Training in Anticipatory Looking Experiments with Adult ParticipantsJohannes Bjerva, Ellen Marklund, Francisco Lacerda. 316-319 [doi]
- Hong Kong Cantonese L4 Learners' Oral Production of German: Towards the Analysis of Consonant ProductionInge Bley-Hiersemenzel, Florian Schiel. 320-323 [doi]
- Northern Vietnamese Perception of Non-native TonesAllison Blodgett, Alina Twist, Jessica Bauman, Anita Bowles, Melissa K. Fox, Phuongthao Luu, C. Anton Rytting, Jessica Shamoo Marx, Matthew B. Winn. 324-327 [doi]
- Asymmetries between Speech Perception and Production Reveal Phonological StructurePaul Boersma, Katerina Chládková. 328-331 [doi]
- The Status of the Rhythm Rule within and across Word Boundaries in GermanKaren Bohn, Richard Wiese, Ulrike Domahs. 332-335 [doi]
- Perceiving through the Lens of Native Phonetics: Italian and Danish Listeners' Perception of English Consonant ContrastsOcke-Schwen Bohn, Catherine T. Best, Cinzia Avesani, Mario Vayra. 336-339 [doi]
- Clashes Revisited in the Light of InterprosodyGuri Bordal, Anne Lacheret. 340-343 [doi]
- Gemination in Tarifit Berber: Doing One or Two Things at Once?Fayssal Bouarourou, Béatrice Vaxelaire, Rachid Ridouane, Fabrice Hirsch, Camille Fauth, Rudolph Sock. 344-347 [doi]
- Can a Prosodic Pattern Induce/Reduce the Perception of a Lower-class Suburban Accent in French?Philippe Boula de Mareüil, Iryna Lehka-Lemarchand. 348-351 [doi]
- Derived Contrasts in Scottish English: An EEG StudyVéronique Boulenger, Emmanuel Ferragne, Nathalie Bedoin, François Pellegrino. 352-355 [doi]
- Language- and Talker-dependent Variation in Global Features of Native and Non-native SpeechAnn R. Bradlow, Lauren Ackerman, L. Ann Burchfield, Lisa Hesterberg, Jenna Luque, Kelsey Mok. 356-359 [doi]
- The Effect of Voice Similarity on Stream SegregationAngelika Braun, Helen Hahn. 360-363 [doi]
- The Influence of Noise on Phonological Competition during Spoken Word RecognitionSusanne Brouwer, Ann R. Bradlow. 364-367 [doi]
- A System for Independent E-learning of Practical PhoneticsChristel G. de Bruijn, Miguel Baptista Nunes, Linhao Fang, Rigved Pathak, Jingchao Zhou. 368-371 [doi]
- Tone Perception in Sgaw KarenMarc Brunelle, Joshua Finkeldey. 372-375 [doi]
- Why Do Glottal Stops and Low Vowels Like Each Other?Jana Brunner, Marzena Zygis. 376-379 [doi]
- A Cross Linguistic Analysis of Pitch Range in English L1 and L2Maria Grazia Busà, Martina Urbani. 380-383 [doi]
- A Visual Speech Recognition System for an Ultrasound-based Silent Speech InterfaceJun Cai, Thomas Hueber, Bruce Denby, Elie-Laurent Benaroya, Gérard Chollet, Pierre Roussel, Gérard Dreyfus, Lise Crevier-Buchman. 384-387 [doi]
- Investigating New Syllable Prototypes for the Portuguese LanguageSara Candeias, Fernando Perdigão. 388-391 [doi]
- Local Speech Rate Differences between Questions and Statements in ItalianFrancesco Cangemi, Mariapaola D'Imperio. 392-395 [doi]
- A Forensic Aspect of Articulation Rate Variation in ChineseHonglin Cao, Yingli Wang. 396-399 [doi]
- Phonetic Explanation for Initial and Tonal Evolution in Wu Dialects of ChineseJianfen Cao. 400-403 [doi]
- Comparative Study on Chinese Tone Perception: A Report on Falling f0 ContoursWen Cao, Qiuyu Wang. 404-407 [doi]
- Oral Articulation of Nasal Vowels in FrenchChristopher Carignan. 408-411 [doi]
- Prosodic Characteristics of Interrupted versus Completed Speech Error Repairs in Spontaneous Dutch SpeechPaul Carter, Leendert Plug. 412-415 [doi]
- Oral Consonant Acoustics in Tikúna (Yurí-Tikúna)Fernando Carvalho. 416-419 [doi]
- The Influence of Word-level Prosodic Structure of the Mother Tongue on Production of Word Stress in Dutch as a Second LanguageJohanneke Caspers, Olga Kepinska. 420-423 [doi]
- Subphonemic Detail in Lexical Perception and Production: The Case of Canadian RaisingJuli Cebrian, Craig Chambers. 424-427 [doi]
- Systemic Drift of L1 Vowels in Novice L2 LearnersCharles B. Chang. 428-431 [doi]
- A Cross-linguistic Study of Korean Laryngeal Stops by the Native Speakers of Chinese, English, Korean, and SpanishSeung-Eun Chang, Marjorie Burge, Younghun Choi. 432-435 [doi]
- Phonetic Implementation of Nasality in Taiwanese (and French): Aerodynamic Case StudiesYueh-Chin Chang, Feng-fan Hsieh, Yu-Lun Hsieh. 436-439 [doi]
- A Corpus Study of Retroflex Realizations in Beijing and Taiwan MandarinYung-Hsiang Shawn Chang. 440-443 [doi]
- The Perception of Lexical Tones and Tone Sandhi in L2: Success or Failure?Ao Chen, René Kager. 444-447 [doi]
- What's in a Rise: Evidence for an Off-ramp Analysis of Dutch IntonationAoju Chen. 448-451 [doi]
- Developmental Changes of Acoustical Vowel Space before 7 Years of AgeLi-mei Chen. 452-455 [doi]
- Prosodic Features of Non-native English ProductionSally Chen, Janice Fon. 456-459 [doi]
- A Study of Mandarin Segmental and Monosyllabic Intervals of CB and Early SpeechXiaoxiang Chen, Huiqin Ma, Yunnan Xiao, Li Zhen, Jing Long, Yanjun Deng. 460-463 [doi]
- Perceptual Confusabiltiy of Word-final Nasals in Southern Min and Mandarin: Implications for Coda Nasal Mergers in ChineseYing Chen, Susan Guion-Anderson. 464-467 [doi]
- Modelling Extreme Tonal Reduction in Taiwan Mandarin Based on Target ApproximationChierh Cheng, Yi Xu, Santitham Prom-on. 468-471 [doi]
- Perceiving L2 Phonological Contrasts: Korean and English SibilantsSang Yee Cheon. 472-475 [doi]
- High Vowels in Southern British English: /u/-fronting Does Not Result in MergerKaterina Chládková, Silke Hamann. 476-479 [doi]
- The Distribution of Speech Errors in Prosodic Phrases in KoreanWook Kyung Choe. 480-483 [doi]
- Vowel Duration as a Perceptual Cue for Preceding Stop Laryngeal Contrast in KoreanHansook Choi. 484-487 [doi]
- The Influence of the L1 Lexical System on the Processing of Tones in L2Patrick Chun Kau Chu, Marcus Taft. 488-491 [doi]
- Productivity in Taiwanese Tone Sandhi ReduxChing-ting Chuang, Yueh-Chin Chang, Feng-fan Hsieh. 492-495 [doi]
- Cross-dialectal Perception of Voiceless Dental and Retroflex Sibilant Variants in Taiwan MandarinYu-Ying Chuang, Janice Fon. 496-499 [doi]
- The Acquisition of Plosives and Implosives by a Fulfulde-speaking Child Aged from 5 to 10;29 MonthsIbrahima Abdoul H. Cissé, Didier Demolin, Nathalie Vallée. 500-503 [doi]
- Dopamine Excess May Delay Selection of Syllabic Motor Programs: A Modeling Study of StutteringOren Civier, Daniel Bullock, Ludo Max, Frank H. Guenther. 504-507 [doi]
- Categorical Perception of Tones in VietnameseAlain Content, Noémi Perwez. 508-511 [doi]
- The Influence of Tonal Awareness and Musical Experience on Tone Word LearningAngela Cooper, Yue Wang. 512-515 [doi]
- Frequency and Loudness in Overlapping Turn Onset by Welsh SpeakersSarah Cooper. 516-519 [doi]
- Analyzing the Status of Catalan Schwa in BarcelonaSusana Cortés, Conxita Lleó, Ariadna Benet. 520-523 [doi]
- How Economical are Phonological Inventories?Christophe Coupé, Egidio Marsico, Gérard Philippson. 524-527 [doi]
- Timing Differences in the VC Rhyme of Standard Australian English and Lebanese Australian EnglishFelicity Cox, Sallyanne Palethorpe. 528-531 [doi]
- Articulatory Strategies for Lip and Tongue Movements in Silent versus Vocalized SpeechLise Crevier-Buchman, Cédric Gendrot, Bruce Denby, Claire Pillot-Loiseau, Pierre Roussel, Antonia Colazo-Simon, Gérard Dreyfus. 532-535 [doi]
- On the Emergence of ContrastThaïs Cristófaro Silva, Maria Cantoni. 536-539 [doi]
- Perception of Prothetic /e/ in #sC Utterances: Gating DataFernando Cuetos, Pierre A. Hallé, Alberto Dominguez, Juan Segui. 540-543 [doi]
- Mutual Intelligibility of English Vowels by Chinese Dialect SpeakersRongjia Cui, Vincent J. van Heuven. 544-547 [doi]
- The Perception of /pt/ and /kt/ in European and Brazilian PortugueseConceição Cunha, Jonathan Harrington. 548-551 [doi]
- Inter-dependent Categorization of Voices and SegmentsAnne Cutler, Attila Andics, Zhou Fang. 552-555 [doi]
- Vowel Devoicing in Cusco Collao QuechuaAnn Marie Delforge. 556-559 [doi]
- Influences of Segmental Content on the Perception of Word Duration: A First Approach towards a New Perceptual Model of Speech RhythmVolker Dellwo, Lea Hagmann. 560-563 [doi]
- How Speakers Agree in English: An Experimental Tool for Analysing Prosody and Gesture Simultaneously in Short Film Sequences of ConversationsLaurence Delrue. 564-567 [doi]
- Development of Large Vocabulary Continuous Speech Recognition Using Phonetically Structured Speech CorpusGrazyna Demenko, Marcin Szymanski, Robert Cecko, Marek Lange, Katarzyna Klessa, Mariusz Owsianny. 568-571 [doi]
- Tests of an Interactive, Phrasebook-style Post-laryngectomy Voice-replacement SystemBruce Denby, Jun Cai, Pierre Roussel, Gérard Dreyfus, Lise Crevier-Buchman, Claire Pillot-Loiseau, Thomas Hueber, Gérard Chollet. 572-575 [doi]
- Measurements of the Rhythm of MalayDavid H. Deterding. 576-579 [doi]
- An Acoustic and Perceptive Analysis of Postvocalic /l/ in Mandarin Chinese Learners of GermanHongwei Ding, Oliver Jokisch, Rüdiger Hoffmann. 580-583 [doi]
- The Partially Denasalized Bilabial Plosive in Southern Min: Comparison to [mb] in Amdo TibetanPicus Sizhi Ding. 584-587 [doi]
- Voice Parameter Changes in Smokers during Abstinence from Cigarette SmokingLouise Dirk, Angelika Braun. 588-590 [doi]
- Variation in Voice Onset Time along the Scottish-English BorderGerard Docherty, Dominic Watt, Carmen Llamas, Damien Hall, Jennifer Nycz. 591-594 [doi]
- Quantal Effects in the Temporal Alignment of Prosodic EventsGrzegorz Dogil, Antje Schweitzer. 595-598 [doi]
- Dialectal Feature Imitation in NorwegianWim A. van Dommelen, Snefrid Holm, Jacques C. Koreman. 599-602 [doi]
- Time Series Analysis of Jitter in Sustained VowelsLi Dong. 603-606 [doi]
- The Significance of 'Secondary Cues' for Tonal Identification in FuzhouCathryn Donohue. 607-610 [doi]
- Prosodic Signalling of Sentence Mode in Two Varieties of Irish (Gaelic)Amelie Dorn, Maria O'Reilly, Ailbhe Ní Chasaide. 611-614 [doi]
- Context Sequence Model of Speech Production Enriched with Articulatory FeaturesDaniel Duran, Jagoda Bruni, Hinrich Schütze, Grzegorz Dogil. 615-618 [doi]
- Classification of the Lexicon of Modern Polish According to the Structure of Consonant ClustersKatarzyna Dziubalska-Kolaczyk, Michal Jankowski, Piotr Wierzchon. 619-622 [doi]
- The Effects of Phonological Structure on the Acoustic Correlates of RhythmShelece Easterday, Jason Timm, Ian Maddieson. 623-626 [doi]
- Reinforcing Voiceless Finals in Taiwanese and Hakka: Laryngoscopic Case StudiesJerold A. Edmondson, Yueh-Chin Chang, Feng-fan Hsieh, Hui-chuan J. Huang. 627-630 [doi]
- Differences in Finnish Front Vowel Production and Weighted Perceptual Prototypes in the F1-F2 SpaceOsmo Eerola, Janne Savela. 631-634 [doi]
- Speech Clarity and Coarticulation in Modern Standard Arabic and Dialectal ArabicMohamed Embarki, Slim Ouni, Fathi Salam. 635-638 [doi]
- The Impact of Place of Articulation on VOT for Iranian Cleft Palate ChildrenMarziye Eshghi, Mahmood Bijankhan, Mohsen Shirazi, Mandana Nourbakhsh. 639-642 [doi]
- Multimodal Observation and Measurement of Larynx Height and State during Pharyngeal SoundsJohn H. Esling, Scott Moisik. 643-646 [doi]
- Phonological Aspects of Internal Vowel Alternation in EnglishElena Even-Simkin, Yishai Tobin. 647-650 [doi]
- Reduction of Brazilian Portuguese Vowels in Semantically Predictable ContextsCaleb Everett, Zachary Miller, Kayla Nelson, Vlad Soare, Jacqueline Vinson. 651-654 [doi]
- The Acoustic Modeling of Click TypesMats Exter. 655-658 [doi]
- A Typological Study of the Interaction between Level Tones and DurationMatthew Faytak, Alan C. L. Yu. 659-662 [doi]
- Speaking under Cover: The Effect of Face-concealing Garments on Spectral Properties of FricativesNatalie Fecher, Dominic Watt. 663-666 [doi]
- The Perception of a Derived Contrast in Scottish EnglishEmmanuel Ferragne, Nathalie Bedoin, Véronique Boulenger, François Pellegrino. 667-670 [doi]
- Multimodal Analysis of Discourse Markers 'donc', 'alors' and 'en fait' in Conversational FrenchGaëlle Ferré. 671-674 [doi]
- Perceptual Biases in Consonant DeletionSara Finley. 675-678 [doi]
- Acoustic Classification and Speech Recognition Histories for Adaptable Spoken Language Dialogue SystemsSebastian Fleissner, Xiaoyue Liu, Alex Chengyu Fang. 679-682 [doi]
- Comparing Vowel Formant Normalization MethodsNicholas Flynn, Paul Foulkes. 683-686 [doi]
- Testing Various Metrics for the Description of Vowel Distortion in DysarthriaCécile Fougeron, Nicolas Audibert. 687-690 [doi]
- Language Analysis for the Determination of Origin: An Empirical StudyPaul Foulkes, Kim Wilson. 691-694 [doi]
- Acoustic and Perceptual Characteristics of Reduced Vowels Produced by Speakers of English as a Foreign LanguageCarina Silva Fragozo. 695-698 [doi]
- Automatic Detection of Abnormal Zones in Pathological SpeechCorinne Fredouille, Gilles Pouchoulin. 699-702 [doi]
- Functional Data Analysis of Lip Movements: Repetition Variability as a Function of AgeJohan Frid, Susanne Schötz, Anders Löfqvist. 703-706 [doi]
- Role of Individual Variability in the First Formant (F1) for Vowel Shifting in RPYoshinari Fujino. 707-710 [doi]
- Discrimination Ability and Pronunciation Preference between Voiced and Devoiced Vowels by Native Japanese SpeakersSeiya Funatsu, Satoshi Imaizumi, Masako Fujimoto, Ryoko Hayashi. 711-714 [doi]
- Acoustic Analysis of the New Rising Tone in Hong Kong CantoneseRoxana S. Y. Fung, Cathy S. P. Wong. 715-718 [doi]
- Shanghai Slack Voice: Acoustic and EPGG DataJiayin Gao, Pierre A. Hallé, Kiyoshi Honda, Shinji Maeda, Martine Toda. 719-722 [doi]
- Intra- and Inter-syllabic Coordination: An Articulatory Study of Taiwanese and EnglishMan Gao, Christine Mooshammer, Christina Hagedorn, Hosung Nam, Mark Tiede, Yueh-Chin Chang, Fang-Ying Hsieh, Louis Goldstein. 723-726 [doi]
- Lexical Effects on English Vowel LaryngealizationMarc Garellek. 727-730 [doi]
- Impact of Prosodic Position on Vocalic Space in German and FrenchCédric Gendrot, Kim Gerdes, Martine Adda-Decker. 731-734 [doi]
- Phonetic Realization of Automatic (Downdrift) and Non-automatic Downstep in AkanSusanne Genzel, Frank Kügler. 735-738 [doi]
- Rounding and Height Contrasts at the Beginning of Different Prosodic Constituents in FrenchLaurianne Georgeton, Nicolas Audibert, Cécile Fougeron. 739-742 [doi]
- Modelling Speech-Song Relations: An Exploratory Study of Pitch Contours, Tones and Prosodic Domains in AnyiDafydd Gibbon, Firmin Ahoua, Adjépolé Kouamé. 743-746 [doi]
- The Role of Rhythmic Chunking in Speech: Synthesis of Findings and Evidence from Statistical LearningAnnie C. Gilbert, Victor J. Boucher, Boutheina Jemel. 747-750 [doi]
- An International Investigation of Forensic Speaker Comparison PracticesErica Gold, Peter French. 751-754 [doi]
- A Computational Modelling Approach to the Development of L2 Sound AcquisitionJian Gong, Martin Cooke, Maria Luisa García Lecumberri. 755-758 [doi]
- Voicing Contrast of Intervocalic Plosives in HungarianTekla Etelka Gráczi. 759-762 [doi]
- Acoustic-Phonetic Characteristics of Clear Speech in BilingualsSonia Granlund, Rachel Baker, Valérie Hazan. 763-766 [doi]
- Voicing of Labiovelar Stops in YorubaSven Grawunder, Bodo Winter, Joseph Atoyebi. 767-770 [doi]
- Dissociable Levels of Speech Processing in Second Language PerceptionIzabelle Grenon. 771-774 [doi]
- The Association of Tones in Tashlhiyt BerberMartine Grice, Timo B. Roettger, Rachid Ridouane, Cécile Fougeron. 775-778 [doi]
- Clear Speech Strategies and Speech Perception in Adverse Listening ConditionsJeremy Grynpas, Rachel Baker, Valérie Hazan. 779-782 [doi]
- Phonological Processes in First and Second Language in an Adolescent Moderate-functioning Austictic IndividualKarolina Grzeszkowiak, Monika Polczynska. 783-786 [doi]
- Temporal Measures of Reduced /sC/-clusters in Toddler Speech: Evidence for a Detailed Lexical SpecificationMargarita Gulian, Claartje Levelt. 787-790 [doi]
- The Fluctuation Scale of the Intonation of Statement and Declarative Question in EnglishJia Guo, Feng Shi. 791-794 [doi]
- Quantity vs Durational Enhancement of Tone in the Maastricht Vowel SystemCarlos Gussenhoven. 795-798 [doi]
- Singing Your Accent Away, and Why It WorksMarinda Hagen, Joop Kerkhoff, Carlos Gussenhoven. 799-802 [doi]
- Vowel Duration in Stressed Position in Central, Northern Varieties of Standard Italian: A Pilot StudyJohn Hajek, Mary Stevens. 803-806 [doi]
- The Completion of a Sound Change in California EnglishLauren Hall-Lew. 807-810 [doi]
- French Listeners' Deafness to Tashlhiyt Berber /bi/-/bbi/Pierre A. Hallé, Rachid Ridouane. 811-814 [doi]
- Durational Correlates of Word-initial Voiceless Geminate Stops: The Case of Kelantan MalayMohd Hilmi Hamzah, Janet Fletcher, John Hajek. 815-818 [doi]
- An Acoustic Study of Word-medial Stop Consonants in 2-3 Year-Old Speakers of American EnglishHelen M. Hanson, Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel. 819-822 [doi]
- EPG Based Research on Tongue Position and Its Constraint of Word-initial Consonants in Standard Mongolian in ChinaHuhe Harnud, Guilan Bao. 823-826 [doi]
- The Diphthongal Vowel Space ParadoxSander van der Harst, Hans Van de Velde, Roeland Van Hout. 827-830 [doi]
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