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Laurence White![]() Dr Laurence White
Role Qualifications & background Professional membership Research interests
Chapters
(2010)
'Assessment of rhythm'
in Lowit A,Kent R (ed.)
Assessment of Motor Speech Disorders
Plural Pub Inc
pp 213 - 252
http://www.pluralpublishing.com/publication_aomsd.htm
(2009)
'Rhythmic and prosodic contrast in Venetan and Sicilian Italian'
in Vigário MC,Frota S,Freitas MJ (ed.)
Phonetics and phonology: Interactions and interrelations
John Benjamins Publishing Company
pp 137 - 158
http://benjamins.com/#catalog/books/cilt.306.07whi/details
(2008)
'Acquiring rhythm: A comparison of L1 and L2 speakers of Canadian English and Japanese'
in Chan H,Jacob H,Kapia E (ed.)
Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Boston University Conference on Language Development
pp 155 - 166
http://www.cascadilla.com/bucld32toc.html
(2007)
'Rhythmic typology and variation in first and second languages'
in Prieto P,Mascaró J,Solé M-J (ed.)
Segmental and prosodic issues in romance phonology
John Benjamins Publishing Company
pp 237 - 257
http://www.benjamins.com/catalog/cilt.282.16whi
Conference Papers
128471334492thesis-dissertationEnglish speech timing: A domain and locus approach. This dissertation presents a descriptive framework for suprasyllabic processes in speech timing, and describes speech production experiments that investigate durational processes at the word level and the utterance level and the interaction of these processes with the effects of pitch accent. The experimental evidence suggests a model of a speech timing comprised of localised effects, in contrast with the diffuse processes typical of accounts that focus on the rhythmic organisation of speech.Within the descriptive framework, two types of process are associated with the domain, a familiar concept in prosodic phonology. Domain-edge processes lengthen segments near the initial and final boundaries of constituents: for example, word-initial lengthening and utterance-final lengthening. Domain-span processes are hypothesised to arise from an inverse relationship between the size of some constituent and the duration of some subconstituent: for example, word-span compression (polysyllabic shortening) and utterance-span compression.The particular segments affected by each domain-edge or domain-span process are termed the "locus": for example, the word is a domain of initial lengthening and the locus is the word-initial syllable onset. It is hypothesised that each process is associated with a locus defined in phonological terms, and that processes may be distinguished by their distinct loci. The experimental work examines the loci of durational effects, indicating support for domain-edge processes - but not domain-span processes - at the word level and the utterance level.Utterance-final lengthening is found to be progressive, affecting syllable codas and the final syllable nucleus within a word-rhyme locus. These results contradict the idea of a gradual deceleration in speech at the end of utterances. Utterance-initial shortening suggests that where the boundary cue is the termination of the preceding silence there is an absence of the hierarchical lengthening demonstrated word-initially and phrase-initially. There is no evidence of an utterance-span effect.Word-initial lengthening is supported, with a syllable onset locus, as indicated by previous results. Word-initial lengthening is found not to interact with accentual lengthening, and may be attenuated in polysyllables.Polysyllabic shortening, a domain-span process at the word level, is not supported. The previously-observed effect arises from variation in the distribution of accentual lengthening between monosyllables, disyllables and trisyllables. The locus of accentual lengthening is shown to be the word, with the greatest lengthening tending to be found at word edges. Because total lengthening is no greater in polysyllables than in monosyllables, the effect on particular subconstituents is attenuated when the word contains more syllables.Word-rhyme compression is proposed to account for variation in nucleus duration according to the number of subsequent syllables in accented and unaccented words. Because it is the only domain-span process supported, it may be theoretically preferable to interpret word-rhyme compression as a domain-edge effect at the word level, similar to utterance-final lengthening but affecting nuclei rather than codas within the locus.
University of Edinburgh.
(2002) FalsemanualTrue
(2010)
'Segmentation cues in spontaneous and read speech'
Fifth Conference on Speech Prosody.
Chicago
pp 1 - 4
(2008)
'The long and the short and the final: Phonological vowel length and prosodic timing in Hungarian'
in Barbosa PA,Madureira S,Reis C (ed.)
Fourth Conference on Speech Prosody.
Campinas
pp 363 - 366
(2007)
'Rhythm metrics predict rhythmic discrimination'
in Trouvain J,Barry WJ (ed.)
International Congress of the Phonetic Sciences.
Saarbrücken
pp 1009 - 1012
(1997)
'The domain of accentual lengthening in Scottish English'
Eurospeech '97: Fifth European Conference on Speech Communication and Technology.
pp 795 - 798
(1996)
'The domain of the durational effects of accent in Scottish English'
Institute of Acoustics Autumn Conference: Speech and Hearing '96.
pp 171 - 178
(1995)
'An automated style checker for human-computer dialogue engineering'
ESCA Workshop on Spoken Dialogue Systems.
Vigso
pp 149 - 152
Journals
Articles
(2010)
'English words on the Procrustean bed: Polysyllabic shortening reconsidered'
J PHONETICS
38
(3),
pp 459 - 471
, DOI: 10.1016/j.wocn.2010.05.002
(2010)
'How stable are acoustic metrics of contrastive speech rhythm?'
J Acoust Soc Am
127
(3),
pp 1559 - 1569
, DOI: 10.1121/1.3293004
(2010)
'Segmentation by lexical subtraction in Hungarian speakers of second-language English.'
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)
63
(3),
pp 544 - 554
, DOI: 10.1080/17470210903006971
(2009)
'Quantifying Speech Rhythm Abnormalities in the Dysarthrias'
J SPEECH LANG HEAR R
52
(5),
pp 1334 - 1352
, DOI: 10.1044/1092-4388(2009/08-0208)
(2009)
'Structural and dialectal effects on pitch peak alignment in two varieties of British English'
J PHONETICS
37
(2),
pp 145 - 161
, DOI: 10.1016/j.wocn.2008.11.001
(2007)
'Calibrating rhythm: First language and second language studies'
J PHONETICS
35
(4),
pp 501 - 522
, DOI: 10.1016/j.wocn.2007.02.003
(2007)
'Effects of syntactic expectations on speech segmentation.'
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform
33
(4),
pp 960 - 977
, DOI: 10.1037/0096-1523.33.4.960
(2005)
'Integration of multiple speech segmentation cues: a hierarchical framework.'
J Exp Psychol Gen
134
(4),
pp 477 - 500
, DOI: 10.1037/0096-3445.134.4.477
(1999)
'Structural influences on accentual lengthening in English'
J PHONETICS
27
(2),
pp 171 - 206
(1998)
'An experimental evaluation of preferences for data entry method in automated telephone services'
BEHAV INFORM TECHNOL
17
(2),
pp 82 - 92
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