British Association of Academic Phoneticians (BAAP)
BAAP 2004 Colloquium
- Patricia Ashby, University of Westminster
Primary cardinal vowels: the effects of contextualization and length of training on identification success rates.
- Jana Dankovicova, Jill House, Anna Crooks & Katie Jones, UCL, North Surrey NHS PCT
Relationship between musical skills, music training and intonation analysis skills
- Bronwen Evans & Paul Iverson, University College London
Vowel normalization for accent: an investigation of perceptual plasticity in young adults.
- Sara Howard, University of Sheffield
Between-word junctures in children with impaired speech production
- Ghada Khattab, University of Newcastle upon Tyne
Accent features in English-Arabic bilingual children and adults
- Ellen Douglas-Cowie & Roddy Cowie, Queen's University Belfast
The description of naturally occurring emotional speech
- John Local & Gareth Walker, University of York
Prosody, focus and repair in talk-in-interaction
- Bill Wells, University of Sheffield
Prosody, focus and repair: a developmental perspective
- Anne Wichmann, University of Central Lancashire
"Sorry" in casual conversation: Functions and segmental / prosodic realisation
- Melissa Wright, University of York
The Phonetic Properties of 'Multi-Unit First Closing Turns' in British-English Telephone Call Closing Sequences
- Gerry Docherty, Paul Foulkes & Ghada Khattab, U. Newcastle, York, Newcastle
Social-indexical variability and speech perception: an experimental study
- Frank Gooding, University of Wales, Bangor
The perceptual prominence of the upper formant region of front vowels
- Barry Heselwood, University of Leeds
Instrumental evidence for the auditory quality of the Arabic 'ayn
- Ninik Poedjianto, University of Glasgow
The perception of Indonesian English stops: a bidirectional investigation
- John Dawson, University College London
Word-final obstruents and vowel durations in the interlanguage English of native speakers of Modern Greek
- Miho Kamata, University of Leeds
English and Japanese voiceless alveolar/dental stops and their affricated realisations
- Kirsty McDougall, University of Cambridge
Individual variation in vowel-to-vowel coarticulation in British English
- Peggy Mok, University of Cambridge
Vowel-to-vowel coarticulation in Cantonese and Mandarin
- Richard Mullooly, Queen Margaret University College, Edinburgh
An EMA analysis of [r]-insertion in English
- Elinor Payne, University of Cambridge
Connected speech processes in Italian: a study in phonetic motifs
- Gerry Docherty, Paul Foulkes & Dom Watt, Universities of Newcastle, York, Aberdeen
The phonetic properties of 'pre-aspirated' variants of (p, t, k) in the North-East of England
- Peter French & Philip Harrison, P French Associates, York
Adapting the Praat speech analysis programme to the purposes of forensic phonetic casework and research
- Mark Huckvale, University College London
Accent characterisation and recognition using self normalisation
- Mark Jones & Carmen Llamas, Universities of Cambridge, Aberdeen
Dialect-specific assibilation patterns: Dublin and Middlebrough compared
- Elinor Keane & Ron Asher, Universities of Oxford, Edinburgh
Diphthongs and diglossia
- Mikhail Kissine, Hans Van de Velde & Roeland van Hout, Universities of Cambridge, Utrecht, Nijmegen
Variationist contributions to phonetics: a case study of the /v/-/f/ contrast in Dutch
- Claire Timmins & Jane Stuart-Smith, University of Glasgow
An acoustic investigation of L-vocalization in Glaswegian adolescents
- Lluisa Astruc, University of Cambridge
Intonation of sentential adverbs in English and Catalan
- Zoe Butterfint, University of Manchester
The speaker discriminating potential of intra-speaker variation in fundamental frequency
- Paul Carter & John Local, University of York
Rhythm and resonance: metrical structure and the sub-F3 spectrum in liquids
- Yiya Chen, University of Edinburgh
Signature of prosody in tonal realization: evidence from standard Chinese
- Martha Dalton & Ailbhe Ni Chasaide, Trinity College Dublin
The ups and downs of Irish intonation
- Esther Grabe, Greg Kochanski & John Coleman, University of Oxford
Quantitative modelling of intonational variation
- Greg Kochanski, Chilin Shih & Tan Lee, Universities of Oxford, Illinois; CUHK
Connecting acoustics to linguistics in Chinese intonation
- Rachael-Anne Knight, Roehampton University of Surrey and UCL
Nuclear accent shape and perceived prominence
- Ee Ling Low, David Deterding & Fiona Ong, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Rhythm indexes: a comparative study of their reliability
- Inneke Mennen & Margit Aufterbeck, QMUC Edinburgh, University of Cambridge
Pitch-accent realisation in Southern British and Scottish English
- Tomasina Oh & Ee Ling Low, NUS, NTU, Singapore
Rhythm in the disorganized speech of schizophrenic patients: a preliminary study
- Sue Peppe, Fiona Gibbon & Joanne McCann, Queen Margaret Univ. College, Edinburgh
How do you pitch-accent in uptalk?
- Ian Watson, University of Oxford
Post-focal intonation in English and French
- Eva Liina Asu, University of Cambridge
A comparison of intonational peak alignment in two Estonian dialects
- Olga Gordeeva & James Scobbie, Queen Margaret University College, Edinburgh
Non-normative preaspiration of voiceless fricatives in Scottish English: a comparison with Swedish preaspiration.
- Jan Hognestad, Agder University College
Tone on the South-Western coast: some observations from a research project on Norwegian tonal accent
- Richard Ogden, Auli Hakulinen & Liisa Tainio, U. York, U. Helsinki, U. Helsinki
Indexing 'no news' with stylization in Finnish
- My Segerup, University of Lund
Word accents in Gothenburg Swedish
- Nina Grønnum, University of Copenhagen
Why is Danish so hard to understand?
- Yolanda Vazquez Alvarez, N.Hewlett & N. Zharkova, Queen Margaret Univ. College, Edin.
The "trough effect": an ultrasound study
- Patricia Ashby, University of Westminster
Phonetics in one word: learning through fieldwork
- Bill Barry, University of Saarbrücken
Changing English vowel quality - looking beyond the Queen
- Luke van Buuren, University of Amsterdam
Trial DVD on phonation
- Traci Curl, University of York
The phonetic details of spontaneous speech: a parametric analysis of "I don't know"
- John H. Esling, Allison Benner & Lisa Bettany, University of Victoria
Phonetic articulatory control in prebabbling
- Snefrid Holm, University of Trondheim
Acoustic differences between read and spontaneous Norwegian speech: support for a theory of individual strategies
- Mark Jones, University of Cambridge
"New" rhotics in English: an acoustic study of labiodental /r/
- Jonathan Midgley & Sarah Hawkins, University of Cambridge
Formant frequencies of RP monophthongs in four age-groups of men
- Katerina Nicholaidis, Jan Edwards, Mary Beckman & Georgios Tserdanelis, University of Thessaloniki, Ohio State University
Acquisition of lingual obstruents by Greek children
- Leendert Plug, University of York
Reduction patterns in context: the case of "eigenlijk"
- Anna-Maija Rist, University of Aberdeen
VOT patterns in Finnish-English bilinguals' productions of /p t k/
- James Scobbie, Queen Margaret University College, Edinburgh
Prevoiced, short lag, long lag: recurrent but not universal categories
- Catherine Sangster, BBC Pronunciation Research Unit
The work of the BBC Pronunciation Research Unit
- Linda Shockey, University of Reading
Long/short, tense/lax, [±ATR]?
- Rachel Smith, University of Cambridge
The role of allophonic detail in word spotting
- Rosalind Temple, University of York
"-t,d deletion" in York English, or is it?
- Dominic Watt and Carmen Llamas, University of Aberdeen
Variation in the Middlesbrough English vowel system
- Maria Wolters, Nicholas Miller & Ghada Khattab, Newcastle University & QMUC
An efficient annotation scheme for Alternate Motion Rate data
- Irena Yanushevskaya, Trinity College Dublin
Acoustic correlates of the syllable-cut in Hiberno-English