Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Phonetics



 

 

The 200 most cited articles



1.         Factors affecting degree of foreign accent in an L2: A review  
2.         Effects of experience on non-native speakers' production and perception of English vowels  
3.         Effects of tone and focus on the formation and alignment of f0contours  
4.         Contextual tonal variations in Mandarin  
5.         Auditory processing in dyslexia and specific language impairment: Is there a deficit? What is its nature? Does it explain anything?  
6.         Variation and universals in VOT: Evidence from 18 languages  
7.         Phonation types: A cross-linguistic overview  
8.         Glottalization of word-initial vowels as a function of prosodic structure  
9.         Phonetic realization of focus in English declarative intonation  
10.       The development of phonemic categorization in children aged 6-12  
11.       Roles and representations of systematic fine phonetic detail in speech understanding  
12.       Stability of tonal alignment: The case of Greek prenuclear accents  
13.       Gestural drift in a bilingual speaker of Brazilian Portuguese and English  
14.       Calibrating rhythm: First language and second language studies  
15.       The elastic phrase: Modeling the dynamics of boundary-adjacent lengthening  
16.       Rhythmic constraints on stress timing in English  
17.       The Dispersion-Focalization Theory of vowel system  
18.       Influences on articulatory timing in consonant sequences  
19.       Linking facial animation, head motion and speech acoustics  
20.       The social life of phonetics and phonology  
21.       Self-organization in vowel systems  
22.       The universality of intrinsic F0 of vowels  
23.       Temporal properties of spontaneous speech - A syllable-centric perspective  
24.       Articulatory and acoustic studies on domain-initial strengthening in Korean  
25.       Amount of native-language (L1) use affects the pronunciation of an L2  
26.       Perceived phonetic dissimilarity and L2 speech learning: The case of Japanese /r/ and English /l/ and /r/   
27.       Resonance in an exemplar-based lexicon: The emergence of social identity and phonology  
28.       On the phonetics and phonology of "segmental anchoring" of F0: Evidence from German  
29.       Physiological organization of syllables: A review  
30.       Some acoustic cues for the perceptual categorization of American English regional dialects  
31.       Identification and discrimination of Mandarin Chinese tones by Mandarin Chinese vs. French listeners  
32.       Pauses, gaps and overlaps in conversations  
33.       The perception of intonational emphasis: Continuous or categorical?  
34.       Acoustic and aerodynamic correlates of Korean stops and fricatives  
35.       Auditory-visual integration of talker gender in vowel perception  
36.       Factors influencing speech perception in the context of a merger-in-progress  
37.       A theory of speech motor control and supporting data from speakers with normal hearing and with profound hearing loss  
38.       Word-boundary-related duration patterns in English  
39.       The next toolkit  
40.       Structural influences on accentual lengthening in English  
41.       Three-dimensional linear articulatory modeling of tongue, lips and face, based on MRI and video images  
42.       Articulatory properties of initial segments in several prosodic constituents in French  
43.       Factors in the recognition of vocally expressed emotions: A comparison of four languages  
44.       Variation in the realization of glottalization in normal speakers  
45.       Multiple targets of phrase-final lengthening in American English words  
46.       Formant frequencies and body size of speaker: A weak relationship in adult humans  
47.       The influence of L1 on the acquisition of Swedish quantity by native speaker of Spanish, English and Estonian  
48.       Intragestural dynamics of multiple prosodic boundaries  
49.       Language-specific patterns of vowel-to-vowel coarticulation: Acoustic structures and their perceptual correlates  
50.       A comparative study of American English and Korean vowels produced by male and female speakers  
51.       Bi-directional interference in the intonation of Dutch speakers of Greek  
52.       Variable domains and variable relevance: Interpreting phonetic exponents  
53.       Asymmetric mapping from phonetic to lexical representations in second-language listening  
54.       Prosodically conditioned strengthening and vowel-to-vowel coarticulation in English  
55.       The measurement of rhythm: A comparison of Singapore and British English  
56.       Effects of speaking rate on voice-onset time in Thai, French, and English  
57.       Evidence for phonetic and social selectivity in spontaneous phonetic imitation  
58.       Pitch accent scaling on given, new and focused constituents in German  
59.       Prosodic influences on consonant production in Dutch: Effects of prosodic boundaries, phrasal accent and lexical stress  
60.       Meter and speech  
61.       The perception of foreign-accented speech  
62.       Resonant neural dynamics of speech perception  
63.       Specificity and abstractness of VOT imitation  
64.       Novel second-language words and asymmetric lexical access  
65.       Prosodically driven phonetic detail in speech processing: The case of domain-initial strengthening in English  
66.       "Sagging transitions" between high pitch accents in English: Experimental evidence  
67.       Effects of temporal correction on intelligibility of foreign-accented English  
68.       Effects of initial position versus prominence in English  
69.       Saying consonant clusters quickly  
70.       Puzzle-solving science: The quixotic quest for units in speech perception  
71.       Pitch accent realization in four varieties of British English  
72.       Perceptual learning of Cantonese lexical tones by tone and non-tone language speakers  
73.       Degree of foreign accent in English sentences produced by Korean children and adults  
74.       Major trends in vowel system inventories  
75.       Listeners recover /t/s that speakers reduce: Evidence from /t/-lenition in Dutch  
76.       Incomplete neutralization and other sub-phonemic durational differences in production and perception: Evidence from Dutch  
77.       The potential Neandertal vowel space was as large as that of modern humans  
78.       Categorial and gradient properties of assimilation in alveolar to velar sequences: Evidence from EPG and EMA data  
79.       French intonational structure: Evidence from tonal alignment  
80.       Effects of speaking rate on voice-onset time and vowel production: Some implications for perception studies  
81.       On explaining certain male-female differences in the phonetic realization of vowel categories  
82.       Temporal integration and context effects in hearing  
83.       The phonetics of phonological speech errors: An acoustic analysis of slips of the tongue  
84.       Cross-language vowel perception and production by Japanese and Korean learners of English  
85.       A parametric study of the spectral characteristics of European Portuguese fricatives  
86.       Rate effects on French intonation: Prosodic organization and phonetic realization  
87.       Cross language phonetic influences on the speech of French-English bilinguals   
88.       An acoustic analysis of 'happy-tensing' in the Queen's Christmas broadcasts  
89.       The usefulness of metrics in the quantification of speech rhythm  
90.       Prosodic marking of information status in Dutch and Italian: A comparative analysis  
91.       The devoicing of /z/ in American English: Effects of local and prosodic context  
92.       Phonology, phonetics, or frequency: Influences on the production of non-native sequences  
93.       Effects of speaking rate on the vowel length distinction in Japanese  
94.       Native, non-native and L2 perceptual cue weighting for Dutch vowels: The case of Dutch, German, and Spanish listeners  
95.       Prosodic planning: Effects of phrasal length and complexity on pause duration  
96.       Toward universals in the gestural organization of syllables: A cross-linguistic study of liquids  
97.       Contrast and covert contrast: The phonetic development of voiceless sibilant fricatives in English and Japanese toddlers  
98.       The acoustic and perceptual bases of judgments of women and men's sexual orientation from read speech  
99.       The role of auditory feeback during phonation: Studies of Mandarin tone production  
100.    A developmental study of English vowel production and perception by native Korean adults and children  
101.    Phonetic convergence in college roommates  
102.    Bilingual beginnings as a lens for theory development: PRIMIR in focus  
103.    Distinctive features: Phonological underspecification in representation and processing  
104.    Quantal theory, enhancement and overlap  
105.    Toward a taxonomy of nonmodal phonation  
106.    Facial expression and prosodic prominence: Effects of modality and facial area  
107.    The effect of L1 use on production in Quichua - Spanish bilinguals  
108.    The timing of nonmodal phonation in vowels  
109.    The domain of accentual lengthening in American English  
110.    Coarticulation and the accented/unaccented distinction: evidence from jaw movement data  
111.    Towards models of phonation  
112.    Physical variations related to stress and emotional state: A preliminary study  
113.    Rhythm as entrainment: The case of synchronous speech  
114.    Stress, lexical focus, and segmental focus in English: Patterns of variation in vowel duration  
115.    Modelling regressive and progressive effects of assimilation in speech perception  
116.    Downstep and high raising: Interacting factors in Yoruba tone production  
117.    Phonetic alignment constraints: Consonant overlap and palatalization in English and Russian  
118.    Parameterization of vocal tract area functions by empirical orthogonal modes  
119.    Perceptual correlates of Cantonese tones  
120.    Discovering words in the continuous speech stream: The role of prosody  
121.    Mechanisms of modal and nonmodal phonation  
122.    Effect of linguistic experience on the identification of Mandarin Chinese vowels and tones  
123.    Experience and the use of non-native duration in L2 vowel categorization  
124.    Phonetic vs. phonological influences on French listeners' perception of American English approximants  
125.    Effect of lexical status on children's and adults' perception of native and non-native vowels  
126.    Durational and tonal correlates of accent in Finnish  
127.    Aerodynamic characteristics of trills and phonological patterning  
128.    Perceptual assimilation of American English vowels by Japanese listeners  
129.    Pitch downtrend in Spanish  
130.    Comparing stress, lexical focus, and segmental focus: Patterns of variation in Arabic vowel duration  
131.    Rapid and multifaceted effects of second-language learning on first-language speech production  
132.    Emphasis and tonal implementation in Standard Chinese  
133.    Canadians in Alabama: A perceptual study of dialect acquisition in adults  
134.    Pitch accent realization in English and German  
135.    Goal-based speech motor control: A theoretical framework and some preliminary data  
136.    Perception of French vowels by American English adults with and without French language experience  
137.    Glimpsing speech  
138.    Local speech melody as a limiting factor in the turn-taking system in Dutch  
139.    The extent of vowel-to-vowel coarticulation in English  
140.    A cross-linguistic study of accentual lengthening: Dutch vs. English  
141.    Organization of tongue articulation for vowels  
142.    Bilingual language learning: An ERP study relating early brain responses to speech, language input, and later word production  
143.    Timing effects of syllable structure and stress on nasals: A real-time MRI examination  
144.    Stability of temporal contrasts across speaking styles in English and Croatian  
145.    Free classification of regional dialects of American English  
146.    Effects of vowel length and "right context" on the alignment of Dutch nuclear accents  
147.    Coarticulation, assimilation and blending in Catalan consonant clusters  
148.    On loops  
149.    Acoustic correlates of breathy and clear vowels: The case of Khmer  
150.    What dysarthrias can tell us about the neural control of speech  
151.    Perception of predictable stress: A cross-linguistic investigation  
152.    The vocal tract of newborn humans and Neanderthals: Acoustic capabilities and consequences for the debate on the origin of language. A reply to Lieberman (2007a)  
153.    Modelling [s] to [∫] accommodation in English  
154.    Acoustical and perceptual analysis of the voicing distinction in Dutch initial plosives: The role of prevoicing  
155.    The influence of language experience on categorical perception of pitch contours  
156.    The evolution of combinatorial phonology  
157.    Durational adjustment under corrective focus in Standard Chinese  
158.    On the reliability of overall intensity and spectral emphasis as acoustic correlates of focal accents in Swedish  
159.    Temporal effects of focus in Swedish  
160.    Perception of distributed coarticulatory properties of English /l/ and /r/  
161.    Properties of the tongue help to define vowel categories: Hypotheses based on physiologically-oriented modeling  
162.    Natural Referent Vowel (NRV) framework: An emerging view of early phonetic development  
163.    Asymmetries in the perception of speech production errors  
164.    Production and perception of Taiwanese tones in different tonal and prosodic contexts  
165.    Articulatory-acoustic relationships during vocal tract growth for French vowels: Analysis of real data and simulations with an articulatory model  
166.    Influence of syllable-coda voicing on the acoustic properties of syllable-onset /l/ in English  
167.    Practice and performance in speech produced synchronously  
168.    A study of /J/ and /r/ in the light of the "DAC" coarticulation model  
169.    The interlanguage speech intelligibility benefit for native speakers of Mandarin: Production and perception of English word-final voicing contrasts  
170.    Sound level protrusions as physical correlates of sonority  
171.    The segmental anchoring hypothesis revisited: Syllable structure and speech rate effects on peak timing in Spanish  
172.    Discovering the acoustic correlates of phonological contrasts  
173.    The contribution of consonantal and vocalic information to the perception of Korean initial stops  
174.    An MRI-based study of pharyngeal volume contrasts in Akan and English  
175.    Early bilingual acquisition of the voicing contrast in English and Spanish  
176.    In defense of lab speech  
177.    Compensatory articulation during bilabial fricative production by regulating muscle stiffness  
178.    An articulatory-acoustic-aerodynamic analysisof [s] in VCV sequences  
179.    Rhythmic distance between languages affects the development of speech perception in bilingual infants  
180.    Voicing and aspiration in Swedish stops  
181.    A voice for the voiceless: Production and perception of assimilated stops in French  
182.    Parsing coarticulated speech in perception: Effects of coarticulation resistance  
183.    Estimation of vocal tract shapes from speech sounds with a physiological articulatory model  
184.    Comparing French and English coronal consonant articulation  
185.    Automatic selective perception (ASP) of first and second language speech: A working model  
186.    Tone perception in Northern and Southern Vietnamese  
187.    Articulatory characteristics of Hungarian 'transparent' vowels  
188.    Prosodic effects on acoustic cues to stop voicing and place of articulation: Evidence from Radio News speech   
189.    Inter-language interference in VOT production by L2-dominant bilinguals: Asymmetries in phonetic code-switching  
190.    The development of English vowel perception in monolingual and bilingual infants: Neurophysiological correlates  
191.    On the just noticeable difference for tempo in speech  
192.    A sociolinguistic perspective on sociophonetic research  
193.    Word prosodic structure and vowel duration in Dutch  
194.    Gender-specific articulatory-acoustic relations in vowel sequences  
195.    Spectral differences in /ai/ offsets conditioned by voicing of the following consonant  
196.    Stress-related variation in the articulation of coda alveolar stops: Flapping revisited  
197.    Lexical effects in the perception and production of American English /p/ allophones  
198.    An analysis of the dimensionality of jaw motion in speech  
199.    Speed-curvature relations for speech-related articulatory movement  
200.    Compensatory responses of articulators to unexpected perturbation of the palate shape  





Eminent authors

Cho, T.
Honda, K.
Best, C.T.
 Hoole, P.
Recasens, D.     
BoĆ«, L.J. 
 Flege, J.E.
Jongman, A.
Schwartz, J.L.
Tabain, M.
Piske, T.,
MacKay, I.R.A.,




















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