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Laboratory Phonology 10
This chapter is in the book Laboratory Phonology 10

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. Introduction IX
  4. Acknowledgements XIV
  5. List of contributors XV
  6. I. Laboratory phonology. Tenth anniversary session
  7. Laboratory Phonology: Past successes and current questions, challenges, and goals 3
  8. At the juncture of prosody, phonology, and phonetics – the interaction of phrasal and syllable structure in shaping the timing of consonant gestures 31
  9. Geminates at the junction of phonetics and phonology 61
  10. How abstract phonemic categories are necessary for coping with speaker-related variation 91
  11. What is LabPhon? And where is it going? 113
  12. II. Variation and language universals
  13. Variation in co-variation: The search for explanatory principles 133
  14. Tonal effects on perceived vowel duration 151
  15. Mixed voicing word-initial onset clusters 169
  16. Phonetically-based sound patterns: Typological tendencies or phonological universals? 201
  17. III. Variation and the emergence of phonology
  18. Developing representations and the emergence of phonology: Evidence from perception and production 227
  19. Phonological templates in early words 261
  20. Constraints on the acquisition of variation 285
  21. A psycholinguistic perspective on the acquisition of phonology 311
  22. IV. Variation at the crossroad between normal and “disordered” speech
  23. Hard-wired phonology: Limits and latitude of phonological variation in pathological speech 343
  24. Representation and access in phonological impairment 381
  25. Intonation structure and disfluency detection in stuttering 405
  26. Prosodic structure and tongue twister errors 433
  27. Commentary on papers:Variation at the crossroad between normal and disordered speech 461
  28. V. Phonetic detail, processes and representation
  29. Phonetic variation as communicative system: Perception of the particular and the abstract 479
  30. Morphological effects on fine phonetic detail: The case of Dutch -igheid 511
  31. The variability of early accent peaks in Standard German 533
  32. Lexical and contextual predictability: Confluent effects on the production of vowels 557
  33. Modeling listeners: Comments on Pluymaekers et al. and Scarborough 587
  34. What is and what is not under the control of the speaker: Intrinsic vowel duration 607
  35. Variation in overlap and phonological grammar in Moroccan Arabic clusters 657
  36. Variability and homogeneity in American English /ɹ/ allophony and /s/ retraction 699
  37. Compensation for assimilatory devoicing and prosodic structure in German fricative perception 731
  38. Filling the perceptuo-motor gap 759
  39. Backmatter 787
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