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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.

The complete list in BibTeX format can be downloaded here:
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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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Reference

Misnadin, Kirby, J. (2020). Acoustic Correlates of Plosive Voicing in Madurese. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 147(4), 2779-2790.

BibTeX

@article{misnadinAcousticCorrelatesPlosive2020,
  title = {Acoustic Correlates of Plosive Voicing in {{Madurese}}},
  author = {Misnadin and Kirby, James},
  year = {2020},
  journal = {Journal of the Acoustical Society of America},
  volume = {147},
  number = {4},
  pages = {2779--2790},
  doi = {10.1121/10.0000992},
  abstract = {Madurese, a Malayo-Polynesian language of Indonesia, is of interest both areally and typologically: it is described as having a three-way laryngeal contrast between voiced, voiceless unaspirated, and voiceless aspirated plosives, along with a strict phonotactic restriction on consonant voicing-vowel height sequences. An acoustic analysis of Madurese consonants and vowels obtained from the recordings of 15 speakers is presented to assess whether its voiced and aspirated plosives might share acoustic properties indicative of a shared articulatory gesture. Although voiced and voiceless aspirated plosives in word-initial position pattern together in terms of several spectral balance measures, these are most likely due to the following vowel quality, rather than aspects of a shared laryngeal configuration. Conversely, the voiceless (aspirated and unaspirated) plosives share multiple acoustic properties, including F0 trajectories and overlapping voicing lag time distributions, suggesting that they share a glottal aperture target. The implications of these findings for the typology of laryngeal contrasts and the historical evolution of the Madurese consonant-vowel co-occurrence restriction are discussed.}
}

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