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Part I. General Papers:
1. Coarticulation and physical models of the vocal tract Kevin Munhall, E. Vatikiotis-Bateson, and M. Kawato;
2. Production of Schwa by Japanese speakers of English: an acoustic study of shifts in coarticulatory strategies from L1 to L2 Yuko Kondo;
3. Manner and place conflicts in the articulation of accent in Australian English Jonathan Harrington, Janet Fletcher and Mary Beckman;
4. Phrasal influences on articulatory detail Dani Byrd, Shrikanth Narayanan, Abigail Kaun, and Elliot Saltzman;
5. 'Clocks' and 'glue': global timing and intergestural cohesion Elliot Saltzman, Anders Lofqvist, and Subhorbrath Mitra;
6. Commentary: where is coarticulation? John Coleman;
7. Morphemic invariance and the phonology-phonetics boundary Donca Steriade;
8. Investigating universals of sound change: the effect of vowel height and duration on the development of distinctive nasalization John Hajek and Shinji Maeda;
9. Effects of language experience on perceptual organization of vowel sounds Andrew Lotto, Keith Kluender, and Lori Holt;
10. Commentary: from second thoughts to first principles Bjorn Lindblom;
11. What is a starred tone? Evidence from Greek Amalia Arvaniti, D. Robert Ladd, and Ineke Mennen;
12. The boundary tones are coming: on the nonperipheral realization of boundary tones Carlos Gussenhoven;
13. Lexical versus 'phonological' representations of Mandarin Sandhi tones Shu-hui Peng;
14. Commentary: integrating the phonetics and phonology of tone alignment Jennifer Cole;
Part II. Special Topics:
15. Developmental changes in speech perception and early word learning:is there a link? Janet Werker and Christine Stager;
16. Covert contrast as a stage in the acquisition of phonetics and phonology James Scobie, Fiona Gibbon and William Hardcastle;
17. Lexical frequency effects on young children's imitative productions Mary Beckman and Jan Edwards;
18. Developmental changes in infants' sensitivity to internal syllable structure Mara Goodman; Peter Jusczyk, and Angela Bauman;
19. Commentary Jan Edwards;
20. Lexicalization of sound change and alternating environments Joan Bybee;
21. Adults' sensitivity to phonotactic probabilities in English words Rebecca Treiman, Brett Kessler, Stephanie Knewasser, and Ruth Tincoff;
22. Temporally organized lexical representations as phonological units Stefan Frisch;
23. The influence of underspecification and Phoneme frequency in speech perception Rochelle Newman, James Sawusch, and Paul Luce;
24. Commentary: counting, connectionism, and lexical representation Gary Dell.
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Add Papers in Laboratory Phonology V: Acquisition and the Lexicon, The traditional focus of the Papers in Laboratory Phonology series has been on the relationship of phonology to phonetics. The present volume expands this domain in setting two new themes: language acquisition and lexical representation. Contributors tack, Papers in Laboratory Phonology V: Acquisition and the Lexicon to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Papers in Laboratory Phonology V: Acquisition and the Lexicon, The traditional focus of the Papers in Laboratory Phonology series has been on the relationship of phonology to phonetics. The present volume expands this domain in setting two new themes: language acquisition and lexical representation. Contributors tack, Papers in Laboratory Phonology V: Acquisition and the Lexicon to your collection on WonderClub |