A LabPhon
bibliography
A. Papers in Laboratory
Phonology
Note. In this part I have indexed each paper by volume, chapter
number and pages. Commentaries are given the same chapter number as the
paper upon which they comment, except in those volumes where
commentary papers were given their own chapter number. Thus, Janet
Pierrehumbert and David
Talkin's 1990 paper, "Lenition of /h/ and glottal stop" is
indexed as
II.4, 90-116; Osamu Fujimura's commentary on
that paper is indexed as II.4,
117-119; whereas Bernard Tranel's commentary in volume IV was given its
own chapter number, and is indexed as IV.14, 188-201.
John Kingston and Mary E. Beckman, eds.
(1990) Papers
in Laboratory Phonology I: Between the Grammar and Physics of Speech.
Mary E. Beckman
and John Kingston.
Introduction. I.1, 1-16.
Sharon Inkelas
and William R. Leben. Where phonology and phonetics
intersect: the case of Hausa intonation. I.2, 17-34.
D. Robert Ladd.
Metrical representation of pitch register.
I.3, 35-57.
G. N. Clements.
The status of register in intonation theory:
comments on
the papers by Ladd and by Inkelas and Leben. I.4, 58-71
Kim E. A.
Silverman and Janet B. Pierrehumbert. The timing of
prenuclear
high accents in English. I.5, 72-106
Gösta
Bruce. Alignment and composition of tonal accents:
comments on
Silverman and Pierrehumbert's paper. I.6, 107-114.
Klaus J.
Kohler. Macro and micro F0
in the synthesis of intonation. I.7, 115-138.
Kim E. A.
Silverman. The separation of prosodies: comments on
Kohler's
paper. I.8,139-151.
Mary E. Beckman
and Jan Edwards. Lengthenings and shortenings and
the
nature of prosodic constituency. I.9, 152-178
Elisabeth
Selkirk. On the nature of prosodic constituency:
comments
on Beckman and Edwards' paper. I.10, 179-200.
Carol A.
Fowler. Lengthenings and the nature of prosodic
constituency:
comments on Beckman and Edwards' paper. I.11, 201-207.
Anne Cutler.
From performance to phonology: comments on Beckman
and
Edwards' paper. I.12, 208-214.
Susan R. Hertz.
The Delta programming language: an integrated
approach
to nonlinear phonology, phonetics and speech synthesis. I.13,
215-257.
John J. Ohala.
The phonetics and phonology of aspects of
assimilation. I.14, 258-275.
Janet B.
Pierrehumbert. On the value of reductionism and formal
explicitness in phonological models: comments on Ohala's paper.
I.15,
276-279.
John J. Ohala. A
response to
Pierrehumbert's commentary. I.16, 280-282.
G. N. Clements.
The
role of the sonority
cycle in core syllabification. I.17, 283-333.
Osamu Fujimura. Demisyllables as sets of
features: comments on Clements's paper. I.18,
334-340.
Catherine
P. Browman and Louis
Goldstein. Tiers in articulatory
phonology, with some
implications for casual speech. I.19, 341-376
Osamu Fujimura. Toward a model of
articulatory control: comments on Browman and Goldstein's paper. I.20,
377-381.
Donca Steriade. Gestures and autosegments:
comments on Browman and Goldstein's paper. I.21,
382-397.
Peter Ladefoged. On dividing
phonetics and
phonology: comments on the papers by Clements and by Browman and
Goldstein.
I.22, 398-405.
John Kingston. Articulatory
binding. I.23,
406-434.
John J. Ohala. The
generality of
articulatory binding: comments on Kingston's paper.
I.24, 435-444.
Louis Goldstein. On articulatory binding:
comments on Kingston's paper. I.25, 445-450.
Patricia A. Keating. The window model of
coarticulation: articulatory,
evidence. I.26,
451-470.
Kenneth N. Stevens. Some factors
influencing the precision required for articulatory targets: comments
on
Keating's paper. I.27, 471-475.
Carol A.
Fowler. Some
regularities in speech
are not consequences of formal rules: comments on Keating's paper.
I.28, 476-489
Gerard J. Docherty and D.
Robert Ladd, eds. (1992) Papers in Laboratory
Phonology
II:
Gesture, Segment, Prosody.
Section A. Gesture
Sarah Hawkins.
An introduction to task
dynamics. II.1, 9-25
Catherine P. Browman and Louis Goldstein."Targetless"
schwa: an articulatory analysis. II.2, 26-55.
Sarah Hawkins.
Comments on
"Targetless" schwa: an articulatory analysis. II.2, 56-59.
John Kingston.
Comments on "Targetless" schwa: an articulatory
analysis. II.2, 60-64.
William G.
Barry. Comments on "Targetless" schwa: an articulatory
analysis. II.2, 65-67.
Mary E.
Beckman, Jan Edwards and Janet Fletcher. Prosodic structure
and
tempo in a sonority model of articulatory dynamics. II.3, 68-86.
Osamu Fujimura.
Comments on Prosodic
structure and tempo in a sonority model of articulatory dynamics. II.3,
87-9.
Janet
Pierrehumbert and David
Talkin. Lenition of /h/ and glottal stop. II.4,
90-116.
Osamu Fujimura. Comments
on chapter 4. II.4,
117-119.
Louis
Goldstein. Comments on
chapters 3 and 4.
II.4,
120-123.
Irene Vogel.Comments
on chapters 3 and 4. II.4,
124-127.
Nigel Hewlett
and Linda Shockey. On types of
Coarticulation. II.5,
128-137.
William G.
Barry and Sarah Hawkins. Comments on
Chapter 5.
II.5,
138-145.
Section B. Segment
Michael Broe. An
introduction to feature geometry. II.6,
149-165.
John J. Ohala. The segment: primitive or derived? II.7,
166-182.
G. N. Clements. Comments
on chapter 7. II.7,
183-189.
John Local. Modeling assimilation in nonsegmental,
rule-free
synthesis. II.8, 190-223.
Klaus Kohler. Comments on chapter 8. II.8,
224-226.
Mario Rossi. Comments on chapter 8.
II.8,
227-228.
Aditi Lahiri and William Marslen-Wilson. Lexical
processing and phonological representation. II.9,
229-254.
John J. Ohala. Comments on chapter 9.
II.9,
255-256.
Catherine P. Browman. Comments on chapter 9.
II.9,
257-260.
Francis Nolan. The descriptive role of segments
evidence
from assimilation. II.10, 261-279.
Bruce Hayes. Comments on chapter 10. II.10,
280-285.
John J. Ohala. Comments
on chapter 10.
II.10,
286.
Catherine P. Browman. Comments on chapter 10. II.10,
287-289.
Anne Cutler. Psychology
and the segment. II.11,
290-295.
Lieselotte Schiefer. Trading
relations in the
perception
of stops and their implications for a phonological theory. II.12,
296-312.
Elisabeth Selkirk. Comments on chapter 12.
II.12,
313-318.
Section C. Prosody
D. Robert Ladd. An introduction to intonational
phonology II.13,
312-334.
Rob van den Berg, Carlos Gussenhoven and Toni
Rietveld. Downstep in Dutch: implications
for
a model. II.14, 335-358.
Nina Grønnum. Comments
on chapter 14.
II.14,
359-367.
Haruo Kubozono. Modelling syntactic effects on
downstep in Japanese. II.15, 368-386.
Mary Beckman and Janet Pierrehumbert. Comments on
chapters 14 and 15. II.15, 387-397.
Amalia Arvaniti. Secondary
stress: evidence from Modern Greek.
II.16, 398-419.
Patricia
A.
Keating ed. (1994) Papers in
Laboratory
Phonology III: Phonological Structure and Phonetic Form.
Patricia A. Keating. Introduction.III.1,
1-4.
Part
I. Intonation
Mary Beckman and Jan Edwards.
Articulatory
evidence for differentiating stress categories.
III.2, 7-33.
Stefanie
Shattuck-Hufnagel.
“Stress shift” as early placement of pitch accents: a comment on
Beckman and
Edwards. III.3,
34-42.
D. Robert Ladd. Constraints
on the gradient
variability of pitch range, or, Pitch level 4 lives! III.4,
43 – 63.
Bruce Hayes. “Gesture” in
prosody: comments in the paper by Ladd. III.5, 64-75.
Victor J. van Heuven. What is
the smallest prosodic domain? III.6,
76-98.
Allard Jongman. The segment as
smallest prosodic element: a curious hypothesis. III.7,
99-103.
Part II. Syllables
Alice Turk. Articulatory phonetic clues to syllable
affiliation:
gestural characteristics of bilabial stops. III.8, 107-135.
Annie Rialland. The phonology and phonetics of extrasyllabicity in
French. III.9, 136-159.
Francis Nolan. Phonetic correlates
of syllable affiliation. III.10,
160-167.
Janet Pierrehumbert. Syllable
structure and word structure: a study of triconsonantal clusters in
English. III.11, 168-188
Part III. Feature
Theory
John J. McCarthy. The phonetics
and
phonology of Semitic laryngeals. III.12, 191-233.
Louis Goldstein. Possible
articulatory bases for the class of guttural consonants.
III.13, 234-241.
Kenneth N. Stevens. Phonetic
evidence for hierarchies of features. III.14,
242-258.
Louis Goldstein. Do
acoustic landmarks constrain the coordination of
articulatory
events? III.15, 259-263
Part IV. Phonetic
Output
Malcah Yaeger-Dror. Phonetic
evidence for sound change in Quebec French. III.16,
267-292.
John Coleman. Polysyllabic words in the YorkTalk
synthesis system. III.17, 293-324.
Keith Johnson. Phonetic
arbitrariness and the input problem: Comments on Coleman’s paper. III.18, 325-330.
Catherine P. Browman. Lip aperture and consonant
releases. III.19,
331-33.
John Kingston. Change and
stability in the contrasts conveyed by consonant
releases.
III.20, 354-361.
Bruce Connell and Amalia Arvaniti (eds). (1995) Papers in
Laboratory
Phonology IV: Phonology and Phonetic Evidence.
Bruce Connell and Amalia Arvaniti.
Introduction. IV.1,
1-5.
Section I. Features
and Perception
John Kingston and Randy L. Diehl. Intermediate
properties in the perception of
distinctive feature values. IV.2, 7-27.
Terrance M. Nearey. A
double-weak view of trading relations: comments on Kingston
and
Diehl. IV.3, 28-40.
John J. Ohala and Manjari Ohala. Speech
perception and lexical representation: the role of
vowel nasalization in Hindi and English. IV.4,
41-60
James M. McQueen. Processing
versus representation: comments on Ohala and Ohala. IV.5,
61-67.
Kenneth de Jong. On the
status of redundant features: the case of backing and
rounding
in American English. IV.6,
68-86.
John J. Ohala. The
perceptual basis of some sound patterns. IV.7,
87-92.
Section II. Prosody
Esther Grabe and Paul Warren. Stress
shift: do speakers do it or do listeners hear it? IV.8, 95-110.
Irene Vogel, H. Timothy Bunnell and Steven
Hoskins. The
phonology and phonetics of the Rhythm Rule. IV.9,
111-127.
Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel. The
importance of phonological transcription in empirical
approaches to ‘stress shift’ versus ‘early accent’: comments on Grabe
and
Warren, and Vogel, Bunnell and Hoskins. IV.10,
128-140.
Haruo Kubozono. Perceptual
evidence for the mora in Japanese. IV.11,
141-156.
Mary E. Beckman. On blending and the mora:
comments on
Kubozono. IV.12, 157-167.
Kathleen Hubbard. Toward a
theory of phonological and phonetic timing: evidence
from
Bantu. IV.13, 168-187.
Bernard Tranel. On phonetic
evidence for phonological mora: comments on Hubbard.
IV.14,
188-201.
Section III.
Articulatory Organization
Caroline
L. Smith. Prosodic patterns in the
coordination
of vowel and consonant gestures. IV.15, 205-222.
Richard Ogden. “Where” is timing? Comments
on Smith. IV.16, 223-234.
Sun-Ah Jun. Asymmetrical
prosodic effects on the laryngeal gesture in Korean. IV.17,
235-253.
Gerard J. Docherty. On a
gestural account of lenis stop voicing in Korean: comments
on
Jun. IV.18, 254-264.
Daniel Recasens, Jordi Fontdevila and Maria Dolors
Pallarès.
A production and perceptual account of palatalization. IV.19,
265-281.
Elizabeth C. Zsiga. An
acoustic and electropalatographic study of lexical and
postlexical
palatalization in American English. IV.20, 282-302.
James M. Scobbie. What do we do when phonology is
powerful enough to imitate phonetics? Comments on Zsiga. IV.21,
303-314.
Tara Holst and Francis Nolan. The
influence of syntactic structure on [s] to [ʃ] assimilation.
IV. 22,
315-333.
Catherine P. Browman. Assimilation
as a gestural overlap: comments on Holst and Nolan. IV. 23, 334-342.
Sook-Hyang Lee. Orals, gutturals
and the jaw. IV.24, 343-360.
Francis Nolan. The role of the jaw – comments on
Lee. IV.25, 361-367.
Didier Demolin. The phonetics
and phonology of glottalized consonants in Lendu. IV.26, 368-385.
Louis Goldstein. Lendu
consonants and the role of overlapping gestures in sound change:
comments on
Demolin. IV.27, 386-392.
Michael B. Broe and Janet B. Pierrehumbert, eds. (2000) Papers in Laboratory
Phonology V:
Acquisition and the Lexicon.
Michael B. Broe and Janet B. Pierrehumbert. Introduction. V.0, 1-7.
Section 1: Articulation and mental representation
Kevin G. Munhall, Mitsuo Kawato and Eric Vatikiotis-Bateson.
Coarticulation
and physical models of speech production. V.1,
9-28.
Yuko Kondo. Production of schwa by Japanese speakers of English: an
acoustic study of shifts in coarticulatory strategies from L1 to L2.
V.2,
29-39.
Jonathan Harrington, Janet Fletcher and Mary E. Beckman. Manner and
place
conflicts in the articulation of accent in Australian English. V.3,
40-51.
John Hajek and Shinji Maeda. Investigating universals of sound change:
the
effect of vowel height and duration on the development of distinctive
nasalization. V.4, 52-69.
Dani Byrd, Abigail Kaun, Shrikanth Narayanan and Elliot Saltzman.
Phrasal
signatures in articulation. V.5, 70-87.
Elliot Saltzman, Anders Löfqvist and Subhobrata Mitra. ‘Glue’ and
‘clocks’:
intergestural and global timing. V.6,
88-101.
John Coleman. Where is coarticulation? V.7, 102-117.
Section 2: Tone and intonation
Amalia Arnavaniti, D. Robert Ladd and Ineke Mennen. What
is a starred tone? Evidence
from Greek. V.8, 119-131.
Carlos Gussenhoven. The boundary tones are coming: on the nonperipheral
realization for boundary tones. V.9, 132-150.
Shu-Hui Peng. Lexical versus
‘phonological’ representations of Mandarin sandhi tones. V.10, 152-167.
Jennifer Cole. Commentary: integrating the phonetics and phonology of
tone
alignment. V.11, 168-179.
Section 3: Acquisition and lexical representation
Janet F. Werker and Christine L. Stager. Developmental changes in
infant
speech perception and early word learning: Is there a link? V.12,
181-193.
James M. Scobbie, Fiona Gibbon, William J. Hardcastle and Paul
Fletcher. Covert
contrast as a stage in the acquisition of phonetics and phonology.
V.13,
194-207.
Mary Beckman and Jan Edwards. Lexical frequency effects on young
children’s
imitative productions. V.14, 208- 218.
Andrew J. Lotto, Keith R. Kluender and Lori L. Holt. Effects of
language
experience on organization of vowel sounds. V.15, 219-227.
Mara B. Goodman and Peter W. Jusczyk. The onset of sensitivity to internal syllable structure. V.16,
228-239.
Jan Edwards. Commentary: Lexical representations in acquisition. V.17,
240-249.
Joan Bybee. Lexicalization of
sound change and alternating environments. V.18, 250-268.
Rebecca Treiman, Brett Kessler, Stephanie Knewasser, Ruth Tincoff and
Margo
Bowman. English speakers’ sensitivity to phonotactic patterns V.19,
269-282.
Stefan Frisch. Temporally organized lexical representations as phonological units. V.20,
283-298.
Rochelle Newman, James Sawusch and Paul Luce. Underspecification and
phoneme
frequency in speech perception. V.21, 299-312.
Donca Steriade. Paradigm uniformity and the phonetics-phonology
boundary. V.22,
313-334.
Gary S. Dell. Counting, connectionism, and lexical representation.
V.23,
335-348.
John Local,
Richard Ogden and Rosalind Temple, eds. (2003) Phonetic Interpretation: Papers in
Laboratory Phonology
VI.
John
Local, Richard Ogden and Rosalind Temple. Introduction. VI.0, 1-9.
Part I:
Phonological representations and the lexicon
Jennifer
Hay, Janet Pierrehumbert and Mary E. Beckman. Speech
perception, well-formedness and the statistics of the lexicon VI.1, 13-37.
Mary E. Beckman and
Janet
Pierrehumbert. Interpreting 'phonetic
interpretation' over the lexicon. VI.2, 13-37.
Sarah
Hawkins and Noel Nguyen. Effects on word
recognition of syllable-onset cues to voicing. VI.3, 38-74.
Richard
Wright.
Factors
of lexical competition in vowel
articulation. VI.4, 75-87.
John Coleman Commentary:
probability, detail and experience. VI.5, 88-100.
Part II: Phonetic
interpretation and phrasal structure
John Harris Release the
captive coda: the foot as a domain of phonetic interpretation. VI.6, 103-129.
Mariapaola d'Imperio
and
Barbara Gill Fivela. How many
levels of phrasing? Evidence from two varieties of Italian VI.7, 130-144.
Patricia Keating,
Taehong
Cho, Cécile Fougeron and Chai-Shune
Hsu Domain-initial
articulatory strengthening in four
languages VI.8, 145-163.
D. Robert Ladd and
James
M.
Scobbie.
External sandhi as gestural overlap? Counter-evidence from Sardinian. VI.9, 164-182.
Jonathan Harrington Commentary:
consonant strengthening and lengthening in various languages. VI.10,
183-195.
Part III: Phonetic
interpretation and syllable structure
Terrance M.
Nearey. On the
factorability of phonological units in speech perception. VI. 11,197-221.
Bryan Gick. Articulatory
correlates of
ambisyllabicity in English glides and liquids. VI.12,
222-236.
Paul Carter. Extrinsic phonetic
interpretation: spectral variation in English liquids. VI.13, 237-252.
Kenneth de Jong.
Temporal
constraints and characterising syllable structuring. VI.14, 253-268.
Peter Ladefoged.
Commentary:
some
thoughts on syllables: an old-fashioned interlude. VI. 15, 269-275
Part IV: Phonology
and
natural speech production: contrasts and explanations.
Bushra Adan Zawaydeh. The interaction
of the phonetics and phonology of gutturals. VI.16, 279-292.
Daniel Silverman. Pitch
discrimination during breathy versus modal phonation. VI.17, 293-304.
Katrina Hayward,
Justin
Watkins and Akin Oyètádé. The phonetic interpretation of
register: evidence
from Yorùbá. VI.18, 305-321.
Keiichi Tajima and
Robert F. Port. Speech rhythm in English and Japanese. VI.19, 322-339.
Gerard J.
Docherty. Commentary: on the interpretation of speakers’ performance.
VI.20,
340-354.
Carlos Gussenhoven and Natasha Warner, eds. (2002) Papers
in Laboratory Phonology 7.
Carlos
Gussenhoven and Natasha Warner. Introduction. VII.0, xiii.
Part 1: Phonological processing and encoding
Daniel Jurafsky, Alan Bell &
Cynthia Girand. The role of the lemma in form
variation. VII.1, 3-34
Niels O. Schiller, Albert Costa & Angels
Colomé. Phonological encoding of
single
words: In search of the lost syllable. VII.2,
35-60.
Vincent J. van Heuven & Judith Haan. Temporal
distribution of
interrogativity markers in Dutch: A perceptual study. VII.3,
61-86.
Willem P. J. Levelt. Phonological encoding in
speech
production: Comments on Jurafsky et al., Schiller et al., and van
Heuven and
Haan. VII.4, 87-100.
Janet B. Pierrehumbert. Word-specific
phonetics. VII.5, 101-140.
Danny R. Moates, Z. S. Bond & Verna Stockmal. Phoneme
frequency in spoken word
reconstruction. VII.6, 141-170.
Haruo Kubozono. Temporal neutralization in
Japanese. VII.7, 171-202.
Sharon Peperkamp & Emmanuel Dupoux. A
typological study of stress
‘deafness’. VII.8, 203-236.
Ann R. Bradlow. Confluent talker- and
listener-oriented
forces in clear speech production. VII.9,
237-274.
Anne Cutler. Phonological Processing: Comments on
Pierrehumbert, Moates et al.
Kubozono, Peperkamp & Dupoux, and Bradlow. VII.10,
275-295.
Part 2: In the laboratory and in the field:
relating phonetics
and phonology
G. N. Clements
and Sylvester Osu. Explosives, implosives and nonexplosives: The
phonological function of air pressure differences in stops. VII.11, 299-350.
Maria-Josep Solé. Assimilatory processes
and aerodynamics
factors. VII.12, 351-386.
Sónia Frota. Tonal
association and target alignment in European Portuguese nuclear falls.
VII.13,
387-418.
Ioana Chitoran, Louis Goldstein and Dani Byrd. Gestural
overlap and recoverability:
Articulatory evidence from Georgian. VII.14,
419-448.
Bruce Hayes. The
Phonetics-Phonology Interface: Comments on Clements and Osu,
Solé, Frota, and
Chitoran et al. VII.15, 449-454.
Didier Demolin. The search
for primitives in phonology and the explanation of
sound
patterns: The contribution of fieldwork studies. VII.16,
455-514.
Esther Grabe and Ee Low Ling. Acoustic
correlates of rhythm class.VII.17,
515-546.
José I. Hualde, Gorka Elordieta,
Iñaki Gaminde and Rajka
Smiljanić. From pitch accent to
stress accent in Basque. VII.18,
547-584.
Bert Remijsen, Lexically contrastive stress accent
and
lexical tone in Ma’ya. VII.19,
585-614.
W. Leo Wetzels. Field work
and phonological theory: Comments on Demolin, Grabe
&
Low, Hualde et al., and Remijsen. VII.20,
615-636.
Aditi Lahiri & Henning Reetz. Underspecified
recognition. VII.21,
637-676.
Dafydd Gibbon. Speech recognition: Comments
on Lahiri and Reetz. VII.22, 677-685.
B. Other papers from the
Laboratory
Phonology conferences, but not published in the proceedings (poster
papers etc.)
(excludes unpublished commentaries)
LabPhon 3 UCLA
Henrietta J. Cedergren, Louise Levac, Hélène Perreault
and Juan M.
Sosa, "Prosodic hierarchy and temporal variability in Montreal French"
But see "La phrase intonative en language
spontané: ètude préliminaire" (Juan M. Sosa with
F. Poiré, H. Perreault and H.
Cedergren). Revue Québecoise
de Linguistique, 19(2): 93-109, 1990.
LabPhon 5 Northwestern
University
Marlys Macken, "Prosodic Templates".
But see Macken, Marlys A.
and Joseph C. Salmons
1997. Prosodic Templates in Sound Changeâ. Diachronica 14:1, 31 ff.
John Archibald, "The acquisition of syllable weight and foot type"
But see Archibald, J. (1997). The acquisition of English stress by
speakers of
non-accentual languages: lexical storage versus computation of stress. Linguistics,
35.1.
LabPhon 6 York
Jonathan Rodgers. Segmental and suprasegmental influences on the
realization
of voicing in English. VI.
Francis Nolan. Phonological representation and phonetic interpretation
in
intonation analysis. VI
C. LabPhon websites and programmes
Labphon 5
http://babel.ling.northwestern.edu/~labphon/
http://babel.ling.northwestern.edu/~labphon/confprg.html
LabPhon 6 York: website no longer available
Poster presentations:
Eleonora Cavalcante Albano Categorical and
gradient vowel-raising
processes. VI.
Amalia Arnavaniti. Greek Prenasalised Stops, or What do we do when
Phonetics
and Phonology do not match? VI.
Bart de Boer. Explaining the structure of sound systems by
self-organization. VI.
Tina Cambier-Langeveld & Marina Despor. The domain of accentual
lengthening in Dutch revisited. VI.
Ioana Chitoran. Conflicting phonetic and phonological evidence in a
perception-production
study of Romanian diphthongs. VI.
Taehong Cho and Peter
Ladefoged. The specification of Voice Onset Time: evidence from
17 endangered languages. VI.
Jennifer Cole, José I. Hualde, & Khalil Iskarous. Contrast and phonetic variation:
factors governing the continuancy of [ɣ]
in Spanish and Arabic. VI.
John Coleman, Paula West & Jana Dankovičová. Phonotactic
grammaticality is gradient. VI.
Bruce Connell. Downdrift,
declination and final lowering in mambila. VI.
Mirjam Ernestus. The perception of voicedness in Dutch. VI.
Janet Fletcher & Nicholas Evans. Intonational categories in Mayali. VI.
Cécile
Fougeron. Prosodic domain initial
strengthening as a local edge effect. VI.
Esther Grabe. Final lowering: fact or artifact? VI.
Esther Grabe, Francis Nolan, & K. J. Farrar. The phonetic
and
phonological representation of cross-varietal differences in English
intonation. VI.
Martin Grice & Ralf
Benzmüller. Tonal affiliation in
German nuclear
fall and fall-rises. VI.
Judith Haan. Upstep
in Dutch: phonetic or
phonological? VI.
John Hajek and Ian Watson. Suprasegmental
effects in the developments
of distinctive nasalisation: more evidence for the perceptual basis of
sound change? VI.
Michael Jessen & Krzysztof
Marasek. The role of voice quality
and the distinction between tense and lax vowels in the interpretation
and prediction
of word stress in a linguistic system with ambiguous vowel quality. VI.
Kenneth de Jong & Samuel Gyasi
Obeng. Labio-palatalization in
Twi: an interaction of prosodic, quantal and contrast Factors. VI.
K. J. Kohler. F0
measurement and prosodic
phonology within the linguistic system of German. VI.
Ineke Menne. The timing of
prenuclear
accents in a second language. (L2). VI.
Elinor Payne. Phonetic
parameters of phonological
categories. Evidence from Italian
geminates. VI.
Shu-Hui Peng. Evidence for a UR-free account of
tone sandhi in Taiwanese.
VI.
Daniel Recasens. Predicting the
direction of assimilatory processes from coarticulatory data. VI.
Joaquín Romero. Laryngeal and
supralaryngeal
gestural coordination in voicing assimilation. VI.
Jim Scobbie, Alice Turk &
Nigel
Hewlett. The articulation of
Scottish vowels. VI.
Iris Smorodinsky. Schwas with and without active
gestural control. VI.
Takayo Sugimoto. Voicing
neutralization in English
and Prominence constraints. VI.
Alison Tunley. Metrical
influences on /r/-colouring
in English. VI.
Vincent J. van Heuven & Rob W.
N. Goedemans. Why are syllables onsets weightless? VI.
Juliette Waals. On
consonants, cluster and segment
durations in Dutch. VI.
Catherine Watson, Margaret
Maclagan
& Jonathan Harrington. Acoustic
evidence for vowel change in New Zealand English. VI.
D.H. Whalen, Catherine T. Best,
& Julia R. Irwin. Lexical
effects on the perception and production of /l/ allophones in English. VI.
Laurence White & Alice Turk.
Prosodic
constituency and syllable duration. VI.
Elizabeth C. Zsiga.
Palatalization and gestural overlap
in Russian and English. VI.
LabPhon 7 Nijmegen
http://www.let.kun.nl/labphon7/programme.html
http://www.let.kun.nl/labphon7/posters.html
LabPhon 8 Yale
http://www.ling.yale.edu/labphon8/program.html
http://www.ling.yale.edu/labphon8/abstracts2.html
LabPhon 9 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
http://www.linguistics.uiuc.edu/labphon9/program.html
http://www.linguistics.uiuc.edu/labphon9/posters.html
LabPhon 10 Paris
http://aune.lpl.univ-aix.fr/~labphon10/
http://aune.lpl.univ-aix.fr/~labphon10/theme/progrpost.htm