Prosody is the organization of speech into a hierarchy of units or domains, some of which are more prominent than others. That is, prosody serves both a grouping function and a prominence-marking function in speech. As examples of the grouping function, some ways in which smaller units are combined to form larger one
Speech utterances are more than the linear concatenation of individual phonemes or words. They are o...
What types of information may children exploit in learning where words begin and end in continuous s...
In this report we summarize the approach of examining structural relations between prosody and disco...
Selkirk (1986) argues for the existence of a level, which she calls P-structure, that mediates betwe...
This chapter first reviews some of the structures that are important to the study of prosodic develo...
The structural elements of the prosodic hierarchy and the ways in which phonological generalisations...
Language processing requires the organization of a complex physical pattern into a memory representa...
International audienceOur ideas about prosodic representation are heavily influenced by our knowledg...
A relationship between prosody on the one hand and syntax and semantics on the other is generally ac...
When we speak, we speak in prosodic chunks. That is, in the speech flow, we produce sound strings th...
Our aim is to show that the units defined in the laboratory by intonational phonology are not only i...
A method for generating acoustic prosody is presented that starts from a very simple symbolic input....
Prosody has been described as being shaped by both discrete, categorical aspects as well as gradient...
It reviewed transversely the researches related to prosody generation in language production, basing...
Contains fulltext : 78887.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Radboud Universi...
Speech utterances are more than the linear concatenation of individual phonemes or words. They are o...
What types of information may children exploit in learning where words begin and end in continuous s...
In this report we summarize the approach of examining structural relations between prosody and disco...
Selkirk (1986) argues for the existence of a level, which she calls P-structure, that mediates betwe...
This chapter first reviews some of the structures that are important to the study of prosodic develo...
The structural elements of the prosodic hierarchy and the ways in which phonological generalisations...
Language processing requires the organization of a complex physical pattern into a memory representa...
International audienceOur ideas about prosodic representation are heavily influenced by our knowledg...
A relationship between prosody on the one hand and syntax and semantics on the other is generally ac...
When we speak, we speak in prosodic chunks. That is, in the speech flow, we produce sound strings th...
Our aim is to show that the units defined in the laboratory by intonational phonology are not only i...
A method for generating acoustic prosody is presented that starts from a very simple symbolic input....
Prosody has been described as being shaped by both discrete, categorical aspects as well as gradient...
It reviewed transversely the researches related to prosody generation in language production, basing...
Contains fulltext : 78887.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Radboud Universi...
Speech utterances are more than the linear concatenation of individual phonemes or words. They are o...
What types of information may children exploit in learning where words begin and end in continuous s...
In this report we summarize the approach of examining structural relations between prosody and disco...