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Phonology and Phonetic Evidence: Papers in Laboratory Phonology IV: 04

Phonology and Phonetic Evidence: Papers in Laboratory Phonology IV: 04

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Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 9/14/1995
EAN 9780521483889, ISBN10: 0521483883

Paperback, 418 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.7 cm
Language: English

The work published in Phonology and Phonetic Evidence presents an integrated phonetics-phonology approach in what has become an established field, laboratory phonology. This 1995 volume is divided into three sections. Part I deals with the status and role of features in phonological representations; Part II, on prosody, contains, amongst others, two papers which present for the first time detailed acoustic and perceptual evidence on the rhythm rule; and Part III, on articulatory organisation, includes several papers which from different perspectives test hypotheses derived from articulatory phonology, thereby testifying to the great influence this theory has exerted in recent years. This, the fourth in the series of Papers in Laboratory Phonology, will be welcomed by all those interested in phonetics, phonology and their interface.

1. Introduction Bruce Connell and Amalia Arvanti
Part I. Features and Perception
2. Intermediate properties in the perception of distinctive feature values John Kingston and Randy L. Diehl
3. A double weak view of trading relations
comments on Kingston and Diehl Terrance M. Nearey
4. Speech perception and lexical representations
the role of vowel nasalization in Hindi and English John J. Ohala and Manjari Ohala
5. Processing versus representation
comments on Ohala and Ohala James M. McQueen
6. On the status of redundant features
the case of backing and rounding Kenneth De Jong
7. The perceptual basis of some sound patterns John J. Ohala
Part II. Prosody
8. Stress shift
do speakers do it or do listeners hear it? Esther Grabe and Paul Warren
9. The phonology and phonetics of the rhythm rule Irene Vogel, Timothy Bunnell, and Steven Hoskins
10. The importance of phonological transcription in empirical approaches to 'stress shift' versus 'early accent'
comments on Grabe and Warren, and Vogel, Bunnell and Hoskins Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel
11. Perceptual evidence for the mora in Japanese Haruo Kubozono
12. On blending and the mora
comments on Kubozono Mary E. Beckman
13. Toward a theory of phonological and phonetic timing
evidence from Bantu Kathleen Hubbard
14. On phonetic evidence for the phonological mora
comments on Hubbard Bernard Tranel
Part III. Articulatory Organization
15. Prosodic patterns in the coordination of vowel and consonant gestures Caroline L. Smith
16. 'Where' is timing?
comments on Smith Richard Ogden
17. Asymmetrical prosodic effects on the laryngeal gesture in Korean Sun-Ah Jun
18. On a gestural account of lenis stop voicing in Korean
comments on Jun Gerard J. Docherty
19. A production and perceptual account of palatalization Daniel Recasens, Jordi Fontdevilla, and Maria Dolors Palleres
20. An acoustic and electropalatographic study of lexical and postlexical palatalization in American English Elizabeth C. Zsiga
21. What do we do when phonology is powerful enough to imitate phonetics
comments on Zsiga James M. Scobbie
22. The influence of syntactic structure on [s] to [ ] assimilation Tara Holst and Francis Nolan
23. Assimilation as gestural overlap
comments on Holst and Nolan Catherine P. Browman
24. Orals, gutturals and the jaw Sook-Hang Lee
25. The role of the jaw - active or passive?
comments on Lee Francis Nolan
26. The phonetics and phonology of glottalized consonants in Lendu Didier Demolin
27. Lendu consonants and the role of overlapping gestures in sound change
comments on Demolin Louis Goldstein
Indexes.