Abstract The regularity of stress patterns in a language depends on distributional stress regularity, which arises from the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables, and durational stress regularity, which arises from the timing of syllables. Here we focus on distributional regularity, which depends on three factors. Lexical stress patterning refers to normal stress patterns within words; interlexical stress patterning refers to patterns that arise from word combinations; and contextual stress patterning refers to adjustments in normal lexical stress patterns (such as the well-known phenomenon of “stress clash avoidance”). A corpus study was done to assess the effect of these three factors on distributional stress regularity in conversa...
It is generally assumed that noun-noun compounds in English are stressed on the left-hand member (e....
The goal of the present research was to study the time course of lexical stress encoding in a free-s...
International audiencePhonological free variation describes the phenomenon of there being more than ...
6, 5467. This paper reviews and builds upon previous studies about how word frequency is relevant in...
This paper reviews and builds upon previous studies about how word frequency is relevant in determin...
Since English stress is involved with various idiosyncratic patterns, it is very difficult to give a...
This dissertation provides an account of stress flexibility in English. Stress is flexible in the se...
“Despite the exceptions, it seems better to attempt to produce some stress rules (even if they are r...
This study of lexical stress in English is part of a series of studies, the goal of which is to desc...
Categorical approaches to lexical stress typically assume that words have either regular or irregula...
This paper attempts to show frequency effect on English word stress with corpus-based study, and to ...
Low frequency words in English show a regularity effect; words whose spellings represent regular pho...
This dissertation examines the interaction of various phonological phenomena with stress assignment....
According to a popular model of speech production, stress is underspecified in the lexicon, that is,...
It is unclear whether word stress in a language is stored as part of the word or whether it is gener...
It is generally assumed that noun-noun compounds in English are stressed on the left-hand member (e....
The goal of the present research was to study the time course of lexical stress encoding in a free-s...
International audiencePhonological free variation describes the phenomenon of there being more than ...
6, 5467. This paper reviews and builds upon previous studies about how word frequency is relevant in...
This paper reviews and builds upon previous studies about how word frequency is relevant in determin...
Since English stress is involved with various idiosyncratic patterns, it is very difficult to give a...
This dissertation provides an account of stress flexibility in English. Stress is flexible in the se...
“Despite the exceptions, it seems better to attempt to produce some stress rules (even if they are r...
This study of lexical stress in English is part of a series of studies, the goal of which is to desc...
Categorical approaches to lexical stress typically assume that words have either regular or irregula...
This paper attempts to show frequency effect on English word stress with corpus-based study, and to ...
Low frequency words in English show a regularity effect; words whose spellings represent regular pho...
This dissertation examines the interaction of various phonological phenomena with stress assignment....
According to a popular model of speech production, stress is underspecified in the lexicon, that is,...
It is unclear whether word stress in a language is stored as part of the word or whether it is gener...
It is generally assumed that noun-noun compounds in English are stressed on the left-hand member (e....
The goal of the present research was to study the time course of lexical stress encoding in a free-s...
International audiencePhonological free variation describes the phenomenon of there being more than ...