While Natural Phonology has long contended that phonemes are specified for their phonetic properties, followers of the theory have concentrated primarily on phonological processes, in- stead of delving into the details of pronounceable representations. In the area of representation, NP has thus failed to pursue its claim that systematic articulatory and perceptual phenomena be- low the level of segmental contrast must be treated phonologically. By building an explicit model of representation in NP, we may help the theory to meet one of its primary challenges: “to con- firm the hypothesis that speech processing is categorical, or phonological, down to the level of the actual phonetic (pronounceable) representation” (Donegan 2002: 79). Promin...
Speech processing by human listeners derives meaning from acoustic input via intermediate steps invo...
Phonological variation of any sort (determined by speech styles, phrasing, or morphophonological rul...
vTable of Contents Preface.............................................................................
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...
The phoneme in Natural Phonology has a different status from that which it has in most versions of ‘...
Phonological representations capture information about individual word forms and about the general c...
The present collection of articles brings together experimental work in the field of segmental and p...
This thesis investigated whether phonological features have perceptual bases. The search for feature...
Phonological representations are typically thought of as abstract: for example, phonemes are argued ...
Natural Phonology (NatPhon) has been the first explanatory model of sound structure which assigned t...
We propose that the interface between phonology and phonetics is mediated by a transduction process ...
Speech processing by human listeners derives meaning from acoustic input via intermediate steps invo...
We propose that the interface between phonology and phonetics is mediated by a transduction process ...
We propose that the interface between phonology and phonetics is mediated by a transduction process ...
Speech processing by human listeners derives meaning from acoustic input via intermediate steps invo...
Phonological variation of any sort (determined by speech styles, phrasing, or morphophonological rul...
vTable of Contents Preface.............................................................................
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...
The phoneme in Natural Phonology has a different status from that which it has in most versions of ‘...
Phonological representations capture information about individual word forms and about the general c...
The present collection of articles brings together experimental work in the field of segmental and p...
This thesis investigated whether phonological features have perceptual bases. The search for feature...
Phonological representations are typically thought of as abstract: for example, phonemes are argued ...
Natural Phonology (NatPhon) has been the first explanatory model of sound structure which assigned t...
We propose that the interface between phonology and phonetics is mediated by a transduction process ...
Speech processing by human listeners derives meaning from acoustic input via intermediate steps invo...
We propose that the interface between phonology and phonetics is mediated by a transduction process ...
We propose that the interface between phonology and phonetics is mediated by a transduction process ...
Speech processing by human listeners derives meaning from acoustic input via intermediate steps invo...
Phonological variation of any sort (determined by speech styles, phrasing, or morphophonological rul...
vTable of Contents Preface.............................................................................