Papers from the third conference in laboratory phonology held at UCLA.
INTERNAL BIBLIOGRAPHIES/INDEXES NOTE
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Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
CONTENTS NOTE
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1. Introduction / Patricia A. Keating -- 2. Articulatory evidence for differentiating stress categories / Mary E. Beckman and Jan Edwards -- 3. "Stress shift" as early placement of pitch accents: a comment on Beckman and Edwards / Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel -- 4. Constraints on the gradient variability of pitch range, or, Pitch level 4 lives! / D. Robert Ladd -- 5. "Gesture" in prosody: comments on the paper by Ladd / Bruce Hayes -- 6. What is the smallest prosodic domain? / Vincent J. Van Heuven -- 7. The segment as smallest prosodic element: a curious hypothesis / Allard Jongman -- 8. Articulatory phonetic clues to syllable affiliation: gestural characteristics of bilabial stops / Alice Turk -- 9. The phonology and phonetics of extrasyllabicity in French / Annie Rialland -- 10. Phonetic correlates of syllable affiliation / Francis Nolan -- 11. Syllable structure and word structure: a study of triconsonantal clusters in English / Janet Pierrehumbert.
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12. The phonetics and phonology of Semitic pharyngeals / John J. Mccarthy -- 13. Possible articulatory bases for the class of guttural consonants / Louis Goldstein -- 14. Phonetic evidence for hierarchies of features / Kenneth N. Stevens -- 15. Do acoustic landmarks constrain the coordination of articulatory events? / Louis Goldstein -- 16. Phonetic evidence for sound change in Quebec French / Malcah Yaeger-Dror -- 17. Polysyllabic words in the YorkTalk synthesis system / John Coleman -- 18. Phonetic arbitrariness and the input problem: comments on Coleman's paper / Keith Johnson -- 19. Lip aperture and consonant releases / Catherine P. Browman -- 20. Change and stability in the contrasts conveyed by consonant releases / John Kingston.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
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Phonological Structure and Phonetic Form: Papers in Laboratory Phonology III brings together work from leading figures in phonology, phonetics, speech science, electrical engineering, psycho- and sociolinguistics, who together offer contributions at the interface of phonetics and phonology. The chapters in this book are organized in four topical sections. The first is concerned with stress and intonation (stress shift, F[subscript o] scaling, contrastive focus); the second with syllable structure and phonological theory (phonetic correlates of syllable affiliation, statistical regularities); the third with phonological features (pharyngeal place of articulation, acoustic correlates); and the fourth with "phonetic output" (sound change, speech synthesis). This is the third in the series Papers in Laboratory Phonology. The two previous volumes, like the conferences from which they were derived, have been influential in establishing Laboratory Phonology as a discipline in its own right. Phonological Structure and Phonetic Form will be equally important in making readers aware of the range of research relevant to questions of linguistic sound structure.
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Grammar, Comparative and general-- Phonology, Congresses.
Phonetics, Congresses.
Phonétique, Congrès.
Phonologie, Congrès.
Experimentelle Phonetik
Fonética (congressos)
Fonetiek.
Fonologia (congressos)
Fonologie.
Gramática comparada.
Grammar, Comparative and general-- Phonology, Congresses.