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9th Conference on Laboratory Phonology Short Title: LabPhon 9 Date: 24-Jun-2004 - 26-Jun-2004 Location: Urbana, Illinois, United States of America Contact: Jennifer Cole Contact Email: jscoleMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issueuiuc.edu Meeting URL: http://www.linguistics.uiuc.edu/labphon9 Linguistic Sub-field: Phonology Meeting Description: The 9th Conference on Laboratory Phonology (LabPhon 9) will be held June 24-26, 2004, at the Beckman Institute on the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The conference organizers are pleased to announce the following program of speakers. Additional conference information and the program of poster presentations can be found at http://www.linguistics.uiuc.edu/labphon9. SESSION: Acquisition as change: L1 phonology LouAnn Gerken (U Arizona), invited speaker (title to be announced) Angela Grimm (U Groningen) The Prosodic Pattern of Words and Phrases in the Acquisition of German Mary E. Beckman, Jan Edwards, & Benjamin Munson (Ohio State U and U Minnesota) Vocabulary growth and developmental expansion of types of phonological Knowledge Sharon Peperkamp, Diogo Almeida & Emmanuel Dupoux (Laboratoire de Sciences Cognitives et Psycholinguistique, Paris and U Maryland) The acquisition of abstract phoneme categories Stefan Frisch (U South Florida), invited discussant SESSION: Prosodic influence on change in sound patterns C�cile Fougeron (CNRS-U Paris III), invited speaker (title to be announced) Mariapaola D'Imperio, H�l�ne Loevenbruck, Caroline Menezes, No�l Nguyen & Pauline Welby (Laboratoire Parole et Langage, Aix-en-Provence and Institut de la Communication Parl�e, Grenoble) Are tones aligned with articulatory events? Evidence from Italian and French Gina Garding & Amalia Arvaniti (U California, San Diego) Dialectal variation in the rising accents of American English Laura Dilley (MIT and Harvard U) Fundamental frequency extrema on weak syllables affect the relative prominence of strong syllables Kenneth de Jong (Indiana U), invited discussant SESSION: Social factors in phonetic variation Gerry Docherty (U Newcastle), invited speaker (title to be announced) Jane Stuart-Smith (U Glasgow) Empirical evidence for gendered speech production: /s/ in Glaswegian Elliott Moreton & Erik Thomas (U North Carolina at Chapel Hill and North Carolina State U) Origins of Canadian Raising in Voiceless-Coda Effects: A Case Study in Phonologization Paul Warren, Jen Hay & Thomas Brynmor (Victoria U of Wellington and U Canterbury) The loci of sound change effects in recognition and perception Henrietta Jonas-Cedergren (U Qu�bec � Montr�al), invited discussant SESSION: Mechanisms of sound change Jonathan Harrington (Macquarie U), invited speaker (title to be announced) Susan G. Guion & Ratree P. Wayland (U Oregon and U Florida at Gainesville) Aerodynamics of [r] in tonogenesis John Hajek & Mary Stevens (U Melbourne) Mechanisms of sound change in Romance: From gemination to degemination in Italy Carlos Gussenhoven (U Nijmegen) A vowel height split explained: Compensatory listening and speaker control Elizabeth Hume (Ohio State U), invited discussant SESSION: Phonological change through the interaction of L1-L2 in bilinguals and language learners James Flege (U Alabama), invited speaker (title to be announced) Isabelle Darcy & Emmanuel Dupoux (Laboratoire de Sciences Cognitives et Psycholinguistique, Paris) Perceptual learning and plasticity in L2 learners: building a new system for phonological processes Mariko Yanagawa (Yale U) Consonant Timing in L2 English: The Emergence of a Default Pattern Ghada Khattab (U Newcastle) Variation in vowel production by English-Arabic bilinguals Norma Mendoza-Denton (University of Arizona) invited discussant SESSION: Phonological models of variation in computer speech processing Julia Hirschberg (Columbia U), invited speaker (title to be announced) Robert Kirchner (U Alberta) Exemplar-based phonology and the time problem: a new representational technique Hosung Nam (Yale U and Haskins Laboratory) A Competitive, Coupled Oscillator Model of Moraic Structure Carol Espy-Wilson (U Maryland), invited discussant NON-THEMATIC SESSION Bob McMurray & David Gow (U Rochester) Tracking the timecourse of multiple context effects in assimilated speech Benjamin Munson (U Minnesota) Lexical Access and Hyperarticulation Amanda Miller-Ockhuizen, Levi Namaseb & Khalil Iskarous (Cornell U, U Namibia and Haskins Laboratory) Posterior constriction location differences in Click types Alice Turk & Mariko Sugahara (U Edinburgh) Phonetic Reflexes of Morphological Boundaries Under Different Speech Rates The LabPhon 9 organizers gratefully acknowledge support for these grants from the National Science Foundation. For additional information about the conference, please visit our website at http://www.linguistics.uiuc.edu/labphon9.