Proceedings of the Tenth International Congress of Phonetic Sciences
eBook - PDF

Proceedings of the Tenth International Congress of Phonetic Sciences

  1. 840 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Proceedings of the Tenth International Congress of Phonetic Sciences

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Information

Year
2019
Print ISBN
9783110133370
eBook ISBN
9783110884685

Table of contents

  1. Preface
  2. Acknowledgement
  3. Contents
  4. Report of the meetings of the Permanent Council held during the Tenth International Congress of Phonetic Sciences in Utrecht, 1-6 August 1983
  5. Plenary Sessions
  6. Opening address. Some Aspects of the 'Phonetic Sciences', Past and Present
  7. Keynote address. Phonetics and Speech Technology
  8. Invited Lectures
  9. 1. Speech and Hearing
  10. Perception of Speech as a Modulated Signal
  11. Speech and Hearing: Some Important Interactions
  12. 2. Relation between Speech Production and Speech Perception
  13. Relation between Speech Production and Speech Perception
  14. Relation between Speech Production and Speech Perception
  15. 3. Can the Models of Evolutionary Biology be Applied to Phonetic Problems?
  16. Can the Models of Evolutionary Biology be Applied to Phonetic Problems?
  17. 'Out of Chaos Comes Order'; Physical, biological, and structural patterns in phonetics
  18. 4. Psycholinguistic Contributions to Phonetics
  19. Perceiving Speech and Perceiving Words
  20. Spontaneous Self-Repairs in Speech: Processes and Representations
  21. 5. Speech Technology in the Next Decades
  22. Speech Technology in the Coming Decades
  23. Speech Technology in the Next Decades
  24. Semi-Plenary Sessions: Symposia
  25. SYMPOSIUM 1: Semantics, Syntax and Prosody
  26. SYMPOSIUM 2: Units in Speech Synthesis
  27. SYMPOSIUM 3: Models of the Larynx
  28. SYMPOSIUM 4: Auditory Analysis and Speech Perception
  29. SYMPOSIUM 5: Phonetic Explanations in Phonology
  30. Symposium 6: Human and Automatic Speech Recognition
  31. Section Papers
  32. Section 1: Acoustic Manifestations of Speech
  33. Die Hochdeutschen und Schweizerhochdeutschen Betonten Monophthonge
  34. Temporal Control at the Utterance Level in German
  35. F<sub>1</sub> Locus and Place of Articulation
  36. The Influence of Voice Sound Level on the Duration of French Long Vowels
  37. Bavarian -a- Vowels: Experimental Investigations on the Comparability of the First Two Formants and of Phonetic Transcriptions
  38. Über akustische Faktoren der Distinktiven Perzeption im Deutschen
  39. Section 2: Speech Synthesis
  40. An Analysis Method for High Quality Formant Synthesis
  41. Voxton, Russon: Systems Generating Impersonal Hungarian and Russian Speech by Rule
  42. Relative Importance of Parameters in Voice Similarity Judgment
  43. The Analysis of Polish Intonation by Synthesis
  44. Recognition of a Spanish VV Sequence
  45. A Phonetically Based Data and Rule System for the Real-Time Text to Speech Synthesis of Hungarian
  46. Semi-automatic Synthesis of Intonation for Dutch and British English
  47. Section 3: Acoustic Analysis and Coding of Speech
  48. On the Acoustic Characterisation of the Oral and Nasal Vowels of French
  49. Effective Implementation of Short-Term Analysis Pitch Determination Algorithms
  50. Analysis and Validation of Higher Pole Correction Function
  51. Estimating Vocal Tract Area Functions: A Progress Report
  52. Real Time Fundamental Frequency Analysis Using the Spectral Comb Method
  53. Jitter in the Singing Voice
  54. A Perceptual Evaluation of Two V/U Detectors
  55. F<sub>0</sub> Behaviour in Mandarin and French: An Instrumental Comparison
  56. On Difference Operation in Linear Prediction
  57. Section 4: Automatic Speech Recognition
  58. Outline of an Auditory Theory of Speaker Normalization
  59. Automatic Segmentation of the Speech Signal into Phonelength Elements
  60. Speaker Recognition in Open Sets
  61. The Machine as an Addressee: When Paralinguistics Fails
  62. Extensions to the Locus Theory
  63. Syllable-based Analysis of Spectral and Temporal Features for Automatic Speech Recognition
  64. Section 5: Physiology and Acoustics of Speech Production
  65. Between Formant Space and Articulation Space
  66. Physiological Explanations of F<sub>0</sub> Declination
  67. Spectral Consequences of a Time-varying Glottal Impedance
  68. On the Reliability of the Intraoral Measuring of Subglottal Pressure
  69. Lung and Larynx Coordination in a Composite Model of Speech Production
  70. Use of an Optical Position-Sensitive Device for Recording Lip and Jaw Movements in Speech
  71. Section 6: Physiological Manifestations of Speech Sounds
  72. Tafkhim in Arabic: the Acoustic and Psychological Parameters
  73. Coordinated Tongue Muscle Activity During /ǝpVp/ Utterances
  74. An Electromyographic Study of Laryngeal Adjustments for the Korean Stops in Syllable-Initial and Final Positions
  75. Glottal Timing in German Voiceless Occlusives
  76. Assimilation of Voice in Dutch
  77. English Diphthongs, [ai, oi, ou]
  78. Section 7: Psychoacoustics of Speech
  79. Differentiating Between Speaking and Singing Vocal Registers
  80. Motor Speech Characteristics in Diving
  81. An Acoustic Determinant of Perceived and Produced Anisochrony
  82. Pitch and the Perceptual Separation of Simultaneous Vowel Sounds
  83. Perception of Speech in a Hyperbaric Helium-Oxygen Atmosphere
  84. Categorical Perception of Speaker Identity
  85. Section 8: Perception of Phonemes
  86. The Role of Coarticulation in the Identification of Consonants
  87. Confusions between Dutch Consonants under Various Conditions of Noise and Reverberation
  88. Amplitude Envelope and the Perception of Breathy Stops in Hindi
  89. Identification of Intervocalic Plosive Consonants: the Importance of Plosive Bursts vs. Vocalic Transitions
  90. The Effects of Visually Presented Speech Movements on the Perception of Acoustically Encoded Speech Articulation as a Function of Acoustic Desynchronization
  91. Section 9: Word Perception
  92. Listening for Phonemes while Reading
  93. Speech Quality and the Gating Paradigm
  94. The Detection of Mispronunciations and the Influence of Context
  95. Effects of Anticipatory Coarticulation on Vowel Detection in Meaningful Words
  96. Section 10: Stress and Accent
  97. Extrametricality and Italian Stress
  98. The Stress Pattern and Its Acoustic Correlates in Beijing Mandarin
  99. On the Distinctive Features of Byelorussian Utterance Accents
  100. Stress in Standard Swahili
  101. Phonetic Reality of Linguistic Structures: the Case of (Secondary) Stress in French
  102. Section 11: Temporal Organisation of Speech
  103. On the Perception of Juncture in English
  104. 'Koartikulation' and 'Steuerung' as Factors Influencing the Perception of 'Momentary Tempo'
  105. Patterns of Temporal Compression in Spoken Italian
  106. Section 12: Communicative Functions of Prosody
  107. Acceptability of Accenting and De-accenting 'NEW' and 'GIVEN' in Dutch
  108. Syntactic Dispositions as a Factor in Discourse Segmentation
  109. The Effect of Accentuation on Comprehension: An Experiment
  110. Section 13: Pitch and Intonation
  111. Perception and Interpretation of Non-Native Intonation Patterns
  112. Experiments on the Stylization of British English Intonation
  113. Gradations in Pitch Accents?
  114. An Analysis of Regional Variation in English Intonation
  115. Surface Tones in Chaga: Towards a Tonetic Classification
  116. Section 14: Speech Acquisition
  117. Pitch and Timing Cues in Speech Intelligibility: the Case of Child Language
  118. Audio-Vocal Self Control Functions: Pitch Fluctuations and Audio-Vocal Pitch Matching
  119. Interactive Speech Synthesis in the Study of Normal Perceptual Development
  120. The Change of Voice during Puberty in Choir Singers Measured with Phonetograms and Compared to Androgen Status together with Other Phenomena of Puberty
  121. Section 15: Sociophonetics
  122. Sociophonetic Restrictions on Subphonemic Elements in Pirahã
  123. Perceptual Description of Long-term Speaker-Characterizing Voice Features by means of Semantic Differential Ratings of Running Speech
  124. Concentration and Diversification of Sound Changes
  125. Stylistic Variation in R.P.
  126. The Relative Importance of Vocal Speech Parameters for the Discrimination of Emotions
  127. A Cross-Dialect Study of Vowel Perception in Standard Indonesian
  128. Tendencies in Contemporary French Pronunciation
  129. Section 16: Phonetics and Phonology
  130. On the Uses of Complementary Distribution
  131. On the Correlation of Phonetic and Phonemic Distinctions
  132. A Distinctive Feature Based System for the Evaluation of Segmental Transcription in Dutch
  133. Section 18: History and Phonetics
  134. The Study of Vowel Quality by Early Arab and Muslim Phoneticians
  135. The Birth of Experimental Phonetics in Spain. Pere Barnils and his Barcelona Laboratories (1913-1933)
  136. Section 19: Phonetics and Foreign Language Teaching
  137. Production and Perception of English Vowel duration by Dutch Speakers of English
  138. Detection of Foreign Accentedness
  139. Patterns of English Word Stress by Native and Non-native Speakers
  140. Korrektiver Ausspracheunterricht auf auditiver Basis
  141. Phonic Transfer: The Structural Bases of Interlingual Assessments
  142. Die Syllabisch-Akzentologischen Modelle der russischen Substantive
  143. Timing of English Vowels spoken with an Arabic Accent
  144. English Intonation from a Dutch Point of View
  145. Section 20: Speech Pathology and Aids for the Handicapped
  146. Intonation Patterns in Normal, Autistic and Aphasie Children
  147. Phono-articulatory Stereotypes in Deaf Children
  148. Acoustic Measurement of Voice Quality in Dysphonia after Traumatic Midbrain Damage
  149. A Contribution to the Phonological Pathology of Speech Structure in Children with Impaired Hearing
  150. A Tactual 'Hearing' Aid for the Deaf
  151. Verbal Apraxia in Cases of So-called Broca's Aphasia in the Light of Electromyographic Studies in Vowel Articulation
  152. Bioelectric Activity of the Articulation Muscles in Deaf Children
  153. Section 21: Hearing Pathology and Speech
  154. Hearing Impairment and the Perception of Speech Sounds
  155. Accents and their Differential Influence on the Perception by Normally Hearing and Hearing-impaired Subjects
  156. Auditory Evaluation of the Speech of Deaf Children
  157. On the Possibility of Tactile Categorical Perception
  158. Dyslexia and Developmental Dysphasia; a Deficit in Processing Rapid Spectral Changes?
  159. Perception of English Contrastive Stress by Brain-damaged Adults
  160. Speech Rate and its Differential Influence on the Perception of Normally Hearing and Hearing-impaired Subjects
  161. Section 22: Speech Errors
  162. An Analysis of Pronunciation Mistakes and Second Language Strategy in the Case of Italian and Mandarin Speaking Learners of English
  163. List of Participants
  164. Index of Contributors

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