Natural Phonology (NatPhon) has been the first explanatory model of sound structure which assigned the central role to functional phonetic principles such as articulatory effort and perceptual distinctiveness. These conflicting principles have been operationalised in a procedural model consisting of weakening processes (minimizing articulatory effort) and strengthening processes (maximizing perceptual distintiveness). Whereas the weakening processes have been mostly categorical in nature, the formalization of the phonological strengthening has been a parenial problem for the procedural models of phonology. In this contribution I will argue that all dimensions of segmental strengthening are controlled by phonetics, and that articulatory, aco...
In this chapter, I investigate a number of issues about phonology, phonetics, and their relationship...
In summary, this dissertation began by considering the wide range of different processes applying in...
Machine recognition of spoken language requires developing more robust recognition algorithms. The...
In this paper, I explore the relationships between phonology and phonetics and argue that there are ...
The present collection of articles brings together experimental work in the field of segmental and p...
The aim of the work is to show how much and where the spoken chain is constrained by paradigmatic ne...
While Natural Phonology has long contended that phonemes are specified for their phonetic properties...
While Natural Phonology has long contended that phonemes are specified for their phonetic properties...
While Natural Phonology has long contended that phonemes are specified for their phonetic properties...
This paper addresses the issue of whether the application of different types of phonetic processes c...
http://msh.revues.org/document7813.htmlInternational audienceRecent approaches to the syllable reint...
According to mainstream linguistic phonetics, speech can be modeled as a string of discrete sound se...
Peña, Bonatti, Nespor, and Mehler (2002) investigated an artificial language where the structure of ...
In their studies of the articulatory patterns that underlie speech, Browman and Goldstein (see e.g. ...
In this chapter, I investigate a number of issues about phonology, phonetics, and their relationship...
In this chapter, I investigate a number of issues about phonology, phonetics, and their relationship...
In summary, this dissertation began by considering the wide range of different processes applying in...
Machine recognition of spoken language requires developing more robust recognition algorithms. The...
In this paper, I explore the relationships between phonology and phonetics and argue that there are ...
The present collection of articles brings together experimental work in the field of segmental and p...
The aim of the work is to show how much and where the spoken chain is constrained by paradigmatic ne...
While Natural Phonology has long contended that phonemes are specified for their phonetic properties...
While Natural Phonology has long contended that phonemes are specified for their phonetic properties...
While Natural Phonology has long contended that phonemes are specified for their phonetic properties...
This paper addresses the issue of whether the application of different types of phonetic processes c...
http://msh.revues.org/document7813.htmlInternational audienceRecent approaches to the syllable reint...
According to mainstream linguistic phonetics, speech can be modeled as a string of discrete sound se...
Peña, Bonatti, Nespor, and Mehler (2002) investigated an artificial language where the structure of ...
In their studies of the articulatory patterns that underlie speech, Browman and Goldstein (see e.g. ...
In this chapter, I investigate a number of issues about phonology, phonetics, and their relationship...
In this chapter, I investigate a number of issues about phonology, phonetics, and their relationship...
In summary, this dissertation began by considering the wide range of different processes applying in...
Machine recognition of spoken language requires developing more robust recognition algorithms. The...