Abstract

Part I: Experimental Phonetics: 1. Laboratory techniques for investigating speech articulation: Maureen Stone (Johns Hopkins University). 2. The aerodynamics of speech: Christine H. Shadle (University of Southampton). 3. Acoustic phonetics: Osamu Fujimura and Donna Erickson (Ohio State University). 4. Investigating the physiology of laryngeal structures: Hajime Hirose (Kitasato University, Japan). 5. Instrumental techniques for linguistic phonetic fieldwork: Peter Ladefoged (UCLA). 6. Experimental design and statistics in speech science: William M. Shearer (Northern Illinois University). Part II: Biological Perspectives: 7. Motor speech disorders: Gary Weismer (University of Wisconsin). 8. Brain functions underlying speech: Ray D. Kent and Kristin Tjaden (University of Wisconsin-Madison). 9. Organic variation of the vocal apparatus: Janet MacKenzie Beck (Queen Margaret College, Edinburgh). Part III: Models of Speech Production and Perception: 10. Acquisition of speech: Peter F. MacNeilage (University of Texas at Austin). 11. Articulatory processes: Joseph S. Perkell (Massachusetts Institute of Technology). 12. Coarticulation and connected speech processes: Edda Farnetani (CNR, Padova). 13. Theories and models of speech production: Anders Lofqvist (Haskins Laboratories, Yale). 14. Voice source variation: Ailbhe Ni Chasaide and Christer Gobl (Trinity College, Dublin). 15. Articulatory/ acoustic/ auditory relationships: Kenneth N. Stevens (Massachusetts Institute of Technology). 16. Auditory neural processing of speech: Bertrand Delgutte (Massachusetts Institute of Technology). 17. Aspects of auditory processing related to speech perception: Brian C. J. Moore (University of Cambridge). 18. Cognitive processes in speech perception: James M. McQueen and Anne Cutler (Max-Planck-Institute, Nijmegen). Part IV: Linguistic Phonetics: 19. Linguistic phonetic descriptions: Peter Ladefoged (UCLA). 20. Phonetic universals: Ian Maddieson (UCLA). 21. Prosody of speech: melody and rhythm: Sieb Nooteboom (Rijkuniversiteit te Utrecht). 22. The relation between phonetics and phonology: John J. Ohala (University of California at Berkeley). Part V: Speech Technology: 23. Speech signal processing: Johan Liljencrants (Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm). 24. Some approaches to automatic speech recognition: William A. Ainsworth (University of Keele). 25. Speaker recognition and forensic phonetics: Francis Nolan (University of Cambridge). 26. Speech synthesis: Rolf Carlson and Bjorn Granstrom (Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm). Bibliography. Index.

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