All Stories

  1. Just noticeable differences for pitch direction, height, and slope for Mandarin and English listeners
  2. Fetal rhythm-based language discrimination
  3. Does Second Language Experience Modulate Perception of Tones in a Third Language?
  4. Variation and change in the nominal pitch-accent system of South Kyungsang Korean
  5. Acoustic characteristics of clearly spoken English tense and lax vowels
  6. A diachronic investigation of the vowels and fricatives in Korean: An acoustic comparison of the Seoul and South Kyungsang dialects
  7. Examining visible articulatory features in clear and plain speech
  8. What Comes After /f/? Prediction in Speech Derives From Data-Explanatory Processes
  9. Acoustic evidence for diachronic sound change in Korean prosody: A comparative study of the Seoul and South Kyungsang dialects
  10. The relative contribution of segments and intonation to the perception of foreign-accented speech
  11. Speaker Sex Influences Processing of Grammatical Gender
  12. Contingent categorisation in speech perception
  13. Perceptual and production training of intervocalic /d, ɾ, r/ in American English learners of Spanish
  14. Speakers of tonal and non-tonal Korean dialects use different cue weightings in the perception of the three-way laryngeal stop contrast
  15. American Chinese learners' acquisition of L2 Chinese affricates /ts/ and /tsh/
  16. Effects of tone on the three-way laryngeal distinction in Korean: An acoustic and aerodynamic comparison of the Seoul and South Kyungsang dialects
  17. Modified locus equations categorize stop place in a perceptually realistic time frame
  18. Acoustics and perception of emphasis in Urban Jordanian Arabic
  19. What information is necessary for speech categorization? Harnessing variability in the speech signal by integrating cues computed relative to expectations.
  20. An acoustic and perceptual analysis of /t/ and /d/ flaps in American English
  21. Phonological neutralization by native and non-native speakers: The case of Russian final devoicing
  22. Intelligibility of Foreign-Accented Speech for Older Adults with and without Hearing Loss
  23. Acoustic characteristics of clearly spoken English fricatives
  24. Perception of clear fricatives by normal-hearing and simulated hearing-impaired listeners
  25. Effects of Acoustic Variability in the Perceptual Learning of Non-Native-Accented Speech Sounds
  26. A comparison of semantic and syntactic event related potentials generated by children and adults
  27. Orthographic vs. morphological incomplete neutralization effects
  28. Categorization of sounds.
  29. The role of linguistic experience in the hemispheric processing of lexical tone
  30. Incomplete neutralization and other sub-phonemic durational differences in production and perception: evidence from Dutch
  31. Contributions of Semantic and Facial Information to Perception of Nonsibilant Fricatives
  32. fMRI Evidence for Cortical Modification during Learning of Mandarin Lexical Tone
  33. Acoustic correlates of breathy and clear vowels: the case of Khmer
  34. Acoustic and perceptual evaluation of Mandarin tone productions before and after perceptual training
  35. The phonological status of Dutch epenthetic schwa
  36. Dichotic Perception of Mandarin Tones by Chinese and American Listeners
  37. Acoustic characteristics of English fricatives
  38. Entries and operations: The great divide and the pitfalls of form frequency
  39. Training American listeners to perceive Mandarin tones
  40. Effects of vowel length and syllable structure on segment duration in Dutch
  41. Speaker normalization in the perception of Mandarin Chinese tones
  42. Acoustic and perceptual evidence for complete neutralization of manner of articulation in Korean
  43. Acoustic Correlates of Grammatical Class
  44. Method for the location of burst‐onset spectra in the auditory‐perceptual space: A study of place of articulation in voiceless stop consonants
  45. Phonological and form class relations in the lexicon
  46. The Acoustic Vowel Space of Modern Greek and German
  47. Duration of frication noise required for identification of English fricatives
  48. Limitations of context conditioned effects in the perception of [b] and [w]
  49. Reply to Bruno H. Repp
  50. Measures of the sentence intonation of read and spontaneous speech in American English