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Journal of Phonetics, Volume 35
Volume 35, Number 1, January 2007
- Lucie Ménard, Jean-Luc Schwartz, Louis-Jean Boë, Jérôme Aubin:

Articulatory-acoustic relationships during vocal tract growth for French vowels: Analysis of real data and simulations with an articulatory model. 1-19 - Parham Mokhtari, Tatsuya Kitamura, Hironori Takemoto, Kiyoshi Honda:

Principal components of vocal-tract area functions and inversion of vowels by linear regression of cepstrum coefficients. 20-39 - Kari Suomi:

On the tonal and temporal domains of accent in Finnish. 40-55 - Amanda L. Miller:

Guttural vowels and guttural co-articulation in Ju∣'hoansi. 56-84 - Rochelle S. Newman

, Shannon Evers:
The effect of talker familiarity on stream segregation. 85-103 - Edward Khouw, Valter Ciocca:

Perceptual correlates of Cantonese tones. 104-117 - Heather L. Balog, David Snow:

The adaptation and application of relational and independent analyses for intonation production in young children. 118-133
Volume 35, Number 2, April 2007
- Marija Tabain

, Pascal Perrier
:
An articulatory and acoustic study of /u/ in preboundary position in French: The interaction of compensatory articulation, neutralization avoidance and featural enhancement. 135-161 - Jelena Krivokapic:

Prosodic planning: Effects of phrasal length and complexity on pause duration. 162-179 - Jennifer Cole

, Heejin Kim, Hansook Choi, Mark Hasegawa-Johnson:
Prosodic effects on acoustic cues to stop voicing and place of articulation: Evidence from Radio News speech. 180-209 - Taehong Cho, James M. McQueen

, Ethan Cox:
Prosodically driven phonetic detail in speech processing: The case of domain-initial strengthening in English. 210-243 - Hartmut Traunmüller, Niklas Öhrström:

Audiovisual perception of openness and lip rounding in front vowels. 244-258 - Richard S. McGowan, Michael S. Howe:

Compact Green's functions extend the acoustic theory of speech production. 259-270
Volume 35, Number 3, July 2007
- Stefan Benus

, Adamantios I. Gafos
:
Articulatory characteristics of Hungarian 'transparent' vowels. 271-300 - Claudia Kuzla, Taehong Cho, Mirjam Ernestus

:
Prosodic strengthening of German fricatives in duration and assimilatory devoicing. 301-320 - Jihène Serkhane, Jean-Luc Schwartz, Louis-Jean Boë, Barbara L. Davis, Christine L. Matyear:

Infants' vocalizations analyzed with an articulatory model: A preliminary report. 321-340 - Douglas H. Whalen, Andrea G. Levitt, Louis M. Goldstein:

VOT in the babbling of French- and English-learning infants. 341-352 - Hugo Quené

:
On the just noticeable difference for tempo in speech. 353-362 - Alicia Beckford Wassink, Richard A. Wright

, Amber D. Franklin:
Intraspeaker variability in vowel production: An investigation of motherese, hyperspeech, and Lombard speech in Jamaican speakers. 363-379 - Marc Swerts

:
Contrast and accent in Dutch and Romanian. 380-397 - Yi Xu

, Fang Liu
:
Determining the temporal interval of segments with the help of F0 contours. 398-420 - Cynthia G. Clopper, David B. Pisoni:

Free classification of regional dialects of American English. 421-438
- Timothy James Riney, Naoyuki Takagi, Kaori Ota, Yoko Uchida:

The intermediate degree of VOT in Japanese initial voiceless stops. 439-443
Volume 35, Number 4, October 2007
- Alice Turk, Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel:

Multiple targets of phrase-final lengthening in American English words. 445-472 - Pilar Prieto

, Francisco Torreira:
The segmental anchoring hypothesis revisited: Syllable structure and speech rate effects on peak timing in Spanish. 473-500 - Laurence White

, Sven L. Mattys:
Calibrating rhythm: First language and second language studies. 501-522 - Laura Dilley, Meredith Brown:

Effects of pitch range variation on f0 extrema in an imitation task. 523-551
- Philip Lieberman:

Current views on Neanderthal speech capabilities: A reply to Boe et al. (2002). 552-563 - Louis-Jean Boë, Jean-Louis Heim, Kiyoshi Honda, Shinji Maeda, Pierre Badin, Christian Abry:

The vocal tract of newborn humans and Neanderthals: Acoustic capabilities and consequences for the debate on the origin of language. A reply to Lieberman (2007a). 564-581

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