Publications
This is a searchable list of publications of scientists working at or associated with the Institute of Phonetics and Speech Processing. You can choose to sort the list by year or by publication type.
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The “Research Reports of the Institute of Phonetics and Speech Communications” (FIPKM, “Forschungseberichte des Instituts für Phonetik und Sprachliche Kommunikation“) were edited and published for 39 volumes until the series was discontinued in 2002. Some of the volumes published between 1996 and 2002 are available online. Others are available in print at request.
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Kirby, J., Ladd, D. (2018). Effects of Obstruent Voicing on Vowel F0: Implications for Laryngeal Realism. Yearbook of Poznań Linguistic Meeting, 4(1), 213-235.
BibTeX
@article{kirbyEffectsObstruentVoicing2018, title = {Effects of Obstruent Voicing on Vowel {{F0}}: Implications for Laryngeal Realism.}, author = {Kirby, James and Ladd, D. Robert}, year = {2018}, journal = {Yearbook of Pozna{\'n} Linguistic Meeting}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {213--235}, abstract = {It is sometimes argued that languages with two-way laryngeal contrasts can be classi-fied according to whether one series is realized canonically with voicing lead or the other with voicing lag. In languages of the first type, such as French, the phonologi-cally relevant feature is argued to be [voice], while in languages of the second type, such as German, the relevant feature is argued to be [spread glottis]. A crucial as-sumption of this position is that the presence of certain contextually stable phonetic cues, namely voicing lead or lag, can be used to diagnose the which feature is phono-logically active. In this paper, we present data on obstruent-intrinsic F0 perturbations (CF0) in two [voice] languages, French and Italian. Voiceless obstruents in both languages are found to raise F0, while F0 following (pre)voiced obstruents patterns together with sonorants, similar to the voiceless unaspirated stops of [spread glottis] languages like German and English. The contextual stability of this cue implies that an active de-voicing gesture is common to languages of both the [voice] and [spread glottis] types, and undermines the idea that a strict binary dichotomy between true voicing and aspirating languages can be reliably inferred based on properties of the surface phonetics.} }
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