Many linguistic factors contribute to variation in vowel dispersion, including lexical properties, such as word frequency, and discourse properties, such as previous mention. Indexical factors, such as regional dialect, similarly contribute to spectral vowel variation in production. A handful of previous studies have further suggested that linguistic and indexical factors interact such that talkers produce more extreme sociolinguistic variants in linguistic contexts that promote phonetic reduction, such as high frequency and high predictability words. The goal of the current study was to extend the empirical base of this research through an exploration of the interactions between regional dialect and lexical phonological similarity, discour...
This dissertation investigates the effects of phonological neighborhoods on pronunciation variation ...
In recent decades, linguists have experimentally demonstrated that the phonetic realization of lexic...
The claim that high-frequency words tend to undergo regular sound change faster than less frequent w...
Many linguistic factors contribute to variation in vowel dispersion, including lexical properties, s...
Various factors are known to affect vowel production, including lexical frequency, neighborhood dens...
Previous research has suggested that a greater degree of social indexing of gender, race, and region...
There are many different regional dialects of American English most of which differ as a function of...
norms affect how speakers perceive input. More recently, in work related to the current project, vow...
Two cues that signal phonological voicing in word-final obstruents in English are the amount of glot...
Drawing from data from a multi-region US vowel production and perception study, we investigate the e...
Recent research has shown that familiar dialects are more intelligible than unfamiliar dialects (Clo...
This paper investigates the effect of listeners’ dialect on the perception of vowels. Listeners from...
In contrast to Hans Kurath and Raven McDavid's traditional analysis of vowel variation presented in ...
Does phonetic grammar exist? The system of phonetic implementation relates surface phonological stru...
Lexical processing is slower and less accurate for unfamiliar dialects than familiar dialects. The g...
This dissertation investigates the effects of phonological neighborhoods on pronunciation variation ...
In recent decades, linguists have experimentally demonstrated that the phonetic realization of lexic...
The claim that high-frequency words tend to undergo regular sound change faster than less frequent w...
Many linguistic factors contribute to variation in vowel dispersion, including lexical properties, s...
Various factors are known to affect vowel production, including lexical frequency, neighborhood dens...
Previous research has suggested that a greater degree of social indexing of gender, race, and region...
There are many different regional dialects of American English most of which differ as a function of...
norms affect how speakers perceive input. More recently, in work related to the current project, vow...
Two cues that signal phonological voicing in word-final obstruents in English are the amount of glot...
Drawing from data from a multi-region US vowel production and perception study, we investigate the e...
Recent research has shown that familiar dialects are more intelligible than unfamiliar dialects (Clo...
This paper investigates the effect of listeners’ dialect on the perception of vowels. Listeners from...
In contrast to Hans Kurath and Raven McDavid's traditional analysis of vowel variation presented in ...
Does phonetic grammar exist? The system of phonetic implementation relates surface phonological stru...
Lexical processing is slower and less accurate for unfamiliar dialects than familiar dialects. The g...
This dissertation investigates the effects of phonological neighborhoods on pronunciation variation ...
In recent decades, linguists have experimentally demonstrated that the phonetic realization of lexic...
The claim that high-frequency words tend to undergo regular sound change faster than less frequent w...