Article
Publicly Available
Lexical neighborhoods and phonological confusability in cross-dialect word recognition in noise
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Cynthia G. Clopper
Published/Copyright:
May 27, 2010
Published Online: 2010-5-27
Published in Print: 2010-5-1
© 2010 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/New York
Articles in the same Issue
- Editor's Note
- Introduction
- Exploring social-indexical knowledge: A long past but a short history
- A sociophonetic analysis of perception of sexual orientation in Puerto Rican Spanish
- Lexical neighborhoods and phonological confusability in cross-dialect word recognition in noise
- Sensitivity to grammatical and sociophonetic variability in perception
- Bringing semantics to sociophonetics: Social variables and secondary entailments
- Levels of Phonological Abstraction and Knowledge of Socially Motivated Speech-Sound Variation: A Review, a Proposal, and a Commentary on the Papers by Clopper, Pierrehumbert, and Tamati, Drager, Foulkes, Mack, and Smith, Hall, and Munson
- Accessing psycho-acoustic perception and language-specific perception with speech sounds
- Listeners use vowel harmony and word-final stress to spot nonsense words: A study of Turkish and French
Articles in the same Issue
- Editor's Note
- Introduction
- Exploring social-indexical knowledge: A long past but a short history
- A sociophonetic analysis of perception of sexual orientation in Puerto Rican Spanish
- Lexical neighborhoods and phonological confusability in cross-dialect word recognition in noise
- Sensitivity to grammatical and sociophonetic variability in perception
- Bringing semantics to sociophonetics: Social variables and secondary entailments
- Levels of Phonological Abstraction and Knowledge of Socially Motivated Speech-Sound Variation: A Review, a Proposal, and a Commentary on the Papers by Clopper, Pierrehumbert, and Tamati, Drager, Foulkes, Mack, and Smith, Hall, and Munson
- Accessing psycho-acoustic perception and language-specific perception with speech sounds
- Listeners use vowel harmony and word-final stress to spot nonsense words: A study of Turkish and French