Editor for this issue: Tomoko Okuno <tomoko
linguistlist.org>
FROM MOUTON DE GRUYTER >From the series Phonology and Phonetics Series Editor: Aditi Lahiri LABORATORY PHONOLOGY 7 Carlos Gussenhoven and Natasha Warner (Editors) 2002. vii, 719 pages. Cloth. Euro 88.00 / sFr 141 / approx. USD 88.00 ISBN 3-11-017087-6 (Phonology and Phonetics 4-1) This volume contains a selection of the oral presentations at the Seventh Conference on Laboratory Phonology, which was held in Nijmegen in 2000, organised jointly by the University of Nijmegen and the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics. Following ist predecessors, it aims to strengthen the empirical basis of current conceptions of the phonological capacity of man and to present data that will develop or modify those conceptions. In addition to the structure of phonological systems, the nature of their phonetic implementation, and the interdependence between these aspects of the speech chain, the volume focuses on the way we process incoming speech signals and the way we construct the surface representations made available for phonetic implementation. There are two sections. Part 1 deals with phonological processing and encoding. Phonological encoding refers to the retrieval of phonological forms from the lexicon and the way in which surface representations are constructed. Phonological processing approaches the issue of lexical representation by investigating the way listeners process spoken language. Part 2 deals with the relation between perceptual and articulatory aspects and the structure of phonological systems. It emphasizes the vitality of that relation by considering the role of new data, particularly field work data, for the development of phonological theory, and contains a number of striking examples of how such data can lead to new analyses of the featural structure of segments. Additionally in this section, empirically supported aspects of phonological theory are put to the test in a speech recognition algorithm. Carlos Gussenhoven & Natasha Warner Introduction Part 1: Phonological Processing and Encoding Daniel Jurafsky, Alan Bell & Cynthia Girand The role of the lemma in form variation Niels O. Schiller, Albert Costa & Angels Colom� Phonological encoding of single words: In search of the lost syllable Vincent J. van Heuven & Judith Haan Temporal distribution of interrogativity markers in Dutch: A perceptual study Willem P.J. Levelt Phonological Encoding in speech production: Comments on Jurafsky at al., Schiller et al., and van Heuven & Haan Janet B. Pierrehumbert Word-specific phonetics Danny R. Moates, Z.S. Bond & Verna Stockmal Phoneme Frequency in spoken word reconstruction Haruo Kubozono Temporal neutralisation in Japanese Sharon Pepercamp & Emmanuel Dupoux A typological study of stress 'deafness' Ann R. Bradlow Confluent talker- and listener-oriented forces in clear speech production Anne Cutler Phonological Processing: Comments on Pierrehumbert, Moates et al., Kubozono, Peperkamp & Dupoux, and Bradlow Part 2: In the laboratory and in the field: relating phonetics and phonology George N. Clements & Sylvester Osu Explosives, implosives, and Nonexplosives: the phonological function of air pressure differences in stops Maria-Josep Sol� Assimilatory processes and aerodynamic factors S�nia Frota Tonal association and target alignment in European Portuguese nuclear falls Ioana Chitoran, Louis Goldstein & Dani Byrd Gestural overlap and recoverability: Articulatory evidence from Georgian Bruce Hayes The Phonetics-Phonology Interface: Comments on Clements & Osu, Sol�, Frota, and Chitoran et al. Didier Demolin The search for primitives in phonology and the explanation of sound patterns: the contribution of fieldwork studies Esther Grabe & Ee Ling Low Acoustic correlates of rhythm class Jos� I. Hualde, Gorka Elordieta, Gaminde I�aki & Rajka Smiljanic' >From pitch accent to stress accent in Basque Bert Remijsen Lexically contrastive stress accent and lexical tone in Ma`ya W. Leo Wetzels Field work and phonological theory: Comments on Demolin, Grabe & Low, Hualde et al., and Remijsen Aditi Lahiri & Henning Reetz Underspecified recognition Dafydd Gibbon Speech recognition: Comments on Lahiri & Reetz Index For more information please contact the publisher: Mouton de Gruyter Genthiner Str. 13 10785 Berlin, Germany Fax: +49 30 26005 222 e-mail: wdg-infoMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issuedegruyter.de To order, please contact SFG Servicecenter-Fachverlage GmbH Postfach 4343 72774 Reutlingen Germany Fax +49 (7071) 93 53 33 E-mail: deGruyter
s-f-g.com Please visit our website for other publications by Mouton de Gruyter http://www.degruyter.com
|
|
----------------- Major Supporters ---------------- |
|
|
Academic Press |
|
|
Arnold Publishers |
|
|
Athelstan Publications |
|
|
Blackwell Publishers |
|
|
Cambridge University Press |
|
|
Cascadilla Press |
|
|
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd |
|
|
CSLI Publications |
|
|
Distribution Fides |
|
|
|
Elsevier Science Ltd. |
|
|
John Benjamins |
|
|
Kluwer Academic Publishers |
|
|
Lernout & Hauspie |
|
|
Lincom Europa |
|
|
MIT Press |
|
|
Mouton de Gruyter |
|
|
Multilingual Matters |
|
|
Oxford UP |
|
|
Pearson Education |
|
|
Rodopi |
|
|
Routledge |
|
|
|
Springer-Verlag |
|
|
|
Summer Institute of Linguistics |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
---------Other Supporting
Publishers------------- |
|
|
|
Anthropological Linguistics |
|
|
|
Bedford/St. Martin's |
|
|
|
Finno-Ugrian Society |
|
|
|
Graduate Linguistic Students' Assoc., Umass |
|
|
|
International Pragmatics Assoc. |
|
|
|
Kingston Press Ltd. |
|
|
|
Linguistic Assoc. of Finland |
|
|
|
Linguistic Society of Southern Africa (LSSA) |
|
|
|
MIT Working Publishers in Linguistics |
|
|
|
Pacific Linguistics |
|
|
|
Pacini Editore Spa |
|
|
|
Utrecht Institute of Linguistics |
|
|
|
Virittaja Aikakauslehti |
|
|
|
Thursday, January 17, 2002 |
|