38 results on '"Beckman, Mary E."'
Search Results
2. Learning acoustic features for English stops with graph-based dimensionality reduction
3. Vowel context effects on the spectral dynamics of English and Japanese sibilant fricatives
4. Age- and gender-related variation in voiced stop prenasalization in Japanese
5. Steady as /∫i/ goes: The spectral kinematics of sibilant fricatives in English and Japanese
6. Examining the relationship between the interpretation of age and gender across languages
7. Phonological neighborhood density and vowel production in children and adults
8. Developing acoustic measures to evaluate the emergence of phonological contrast.
9. Sensorimotor maps and vowel development in English, Greek, and Korean: A cross‐linguistic perceptual categorization study.
10. Modifying speech to children based on perceived developmental level: An acoustic study of adults’ fricatives.
11. Korean listeners’ sensitivity to language‐specific phonetic details of children and adults’ vowel production in five different languages.
12. Why [spa] not [psa]? On the perceptual salience of initial /s/‐stop and stop‐/s/ sequences.
13. Why are Korean tense stops mastered early: Evidence from production and perception.
14. Transitional cues in fricative noise in Greek ∕s∕-stop and stop-∕s∕ sequences: Children versus adults.
15. Evidence from /k/ versus /t/ burst spectra for variable lingual contact precision in normal versus atypical phonological development
16. A phonological interpretation of the ‘‘Gussenhoven–Rietveld Effect’’
17. Kinematic and spectral measures of supralaryngeal correlates of the accent contrast in Australian English high vowels
18. Do children with phonological disorders use more ballistic articulatory movements?
19. Accent, stress, and spectral tilt
20. Production and perception of individual speaking styles
21. Competing hypotheses concerning the articulation of stress in English.
22. Modeling the articulatory dynamics of two kinds of stress
23. Variability in the production of quantal vowels revisited
24. The articulatory kinematics of two levels of stress contrast
25. Jaw height and consonant place
26. Relating formant variability to vowel constriction features extracted from pellet positions.
27. The role of the jaw in consonant articulation.
28. Prosodic categories and duration control
29. Translating pellet positions into constriction features
30. The articulatory kinematics of final lengthening
31. The articulatory kinematics of accent
32. Synthesizing Japanese intonation using a downstep model
33. Articulatory correlates of stress clash rhythms
34. Effects of accent on vowel amplitude in Japanese
35. The phonological domains of final lengthening
36. Perceptual cues to lexical accent contrasts in English and Japanese
37. Final lengthening: A local tempo change
38. SRS prosody rules for Japanese
Catalog
Books, media, physical & digital resources
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.