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Gosselke

Gosselke Initial contact with and acquisition of grammatical tone Sabine Gosselke, Lund University We investigate what happens in learners’ brains during initial contact with grammatical tone and in the early acquisition stages. To this end, we are presently conducting an EEG experiment, where we record participants’ neural activity while they learn pseudowords with grammatically meaningful tone a

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Gosselke.pdf - 2025-01-10

Grønnum

Grønnum Danish stød is tone deaf Nina Gønnum, University of Copenhagen Danish stød recently received a novel interpretation as the phonetic manifestation of a HL tone compressed within one syllable. The stød/non-stød distinction would then be a special case of the more general tonal word accent distinction in standard Swedish and Norwegian. What speaks in favour of such a proposal? (1) It is justi

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Groennum.pdf - 2025-01-10

gussenhoven

gussenhoven Languages with and without word stress Carlos Gussenhoven, Radboud University A language has word stress if a syllable-based culminative and obligatory prominence feature is part of the phonology of words (Hyman 2006). This definition excludes languages with a mora-based obligatory tone, like Kinga, languages with an obligatory phrase-based syllabic pitch accent, like French, and langu

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Gussenhoven.pdf - 2025-01-10

Hirschberg

Hirschberg Multiple dimensions of entrainment in dialogue Julia Hirschberg, Columbia University When people speak together, they often adapt aspects of their speaking style based upon the style of their conversational partner. This phenomena goes by many names, including adaptation, alignment, and entrainment, inter alia. In this talk, I will describe experiments in English and Mandarin examining

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Hirschberg.pdf - 2025-01-10

House et al

House et al Prosodic features and head nods in spontaneous dialogue David House, Simon Alexanderson and Jonas Beskow, Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm This poster reports on prosodic features and temporal synchronization of syllables co- occurring with head nods in spontaneous dialogue in Swedish. The head nods were extracted automatically from motion capture data and then manually c

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/House_Alexanderson_Beskow.pdf - 2025-01-10

Kuegler

Kuegler Focus affects the pitch register – focal lowering in German Frank Kügler, Potsdam University There is ample evidence that focus prominence yields higher scaling of pitch peaks in tone (e.g. Xu 1999 for Mandarin) and intonation languages (e.g. Féry & Kügler 2008 for German). These facts culminated in the proposal of intonational universals in terms of the effort code (Gussenhoven 2004). How

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Kuegler.pdf - 2025-01-10

Ladd

Ladd What is prosody, anyway? Bob Ladd, University of Edinburgh Widespread use of the term prosody in linguistics dates only from the 1970s. Up until then, the term’s primary meaning concerned rules of poetic metre and other aspects of text-setting and poetic well-formedness. The shift from the poetic sense to the term’s current meaning began in the late 1960s and was more or less complete by abou

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Ladd.pdf - 2025-01-10

Lei_Yeh_Fon

Lei_Yeh_Fon The effect of prosody and dialectal variations on syllable-final nasal mergers in Taiwan Mandarin spontaneous speech Hsiang-Yu Lei, Yu-Chiao Yeh, and Janice Fon, National Taiwan University, New Taipei City Our previous work found two syllable-final nasal mergers, /in/→[iŋ] and /əŋ/→[ən], in Northern Taiwan Mandarin, and an additional /iŋ/→ [in] in Southern Taiwan Mandarin (Fon et al. 2

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Lei_Yeh_Fon.pdf - 2025-01-10

Nagano-Madsen

Nagano-Madsen Towards modelling the acquisition of L2 prosody. Data from Swedish learners of Japanese Yasuko Nagano-Madsen, University of Gothenburg Based on the analysis of nine Swedish students learning Japanese as a second language, this paper attempts to provide the basic process of acquisition of L2 Japanese prosody. The ToBI components as well as other prosodic components related to syntax a

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Nagano-Madsen.pdf - 2025-01-10

Niebuhr

Niebuhr Details in the perception of German prominence: Cue power estimates and contexts effects Oliver Niebuhr, Kiel University It is widely accepted for German and other languages that duration and F0 are the major prominence cues, with F0 being more important than duration. But, how much of a change in duration is actually necessary to counterbalance a given change in F0? Our experiment address

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Niebuhr.pdf - 2025-01-10

Roll

Roll Word accents in a neurocognitive perspective Mikael Roll, Lund University We have found that word accent tones have a clear function in facilitating rapid word processing in Swedish. Thus, native speakers unconsciously use word accent tones to predict word structure, in particular which suffix a stem will have. Accent 1 is a stronger suffix-predictor than Accent 2, since it is associated with

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Roll.pdf - 2025-01-10

Schoetz-van de Weijer

Schoetz-van de Weijer Human perception of prosody in domestic cat meows Susanne Schötz and Joost van de Weijer, Lund University This study examined human listeners’ ability to classify domestic cat vocalisations (meows) recorded in two different contexts; during feeding time (food related meows) and while waiting to visit a veterinarian (vet related meows). A pitch analysis showed a tendency for f

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Schoetz-van_de_Weijer.pdf - 2025-01-10

Tuttle_Brucks

Tuttle_Brucks Negative prosody in interior Alaskan Athabascan languages Siri Tuttle1, and Caleb Brucks2, 1University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2University of Regina Upper and Lower Tanana are Athabascan languages of interior Alaska spoken along the Tanana river. Both languages have sparse low tone from proto-Athabascan glottalization and in synchronic glottal environments, while intonation provides mos

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Tuttle_Brucks.pdf - 2025-01-10

Yeh_Lei_Fon

Yeh_Lei_Fon The effect of prosody and dialectal variations on syllable-final nasal mergers in Taiwan Mandarin spontaneous speech Hsiang-Yu Lei, Yu-Chiao Yeh, and Janice Fon, National Taiwan University, New Taipei City   Our previous work found two syllable-final nasal mergers,  /in/→[iŋ] and /əŋ/→[ən], in Northern Taiwan Mandarin, and an additional /iŋ/→ [in] in Southern Taiwan Mandarin (Fon et al

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Yeh_Lei_Fon.pdf - 2025-01-10

No title

Abstract for ConSOLE 9, December 8-10, 2000 Petra Burkhardt 35 Clark Street New Haven, CT 06511, USA 1-203-776-5473 petra.burkhardt@yale.edu Department of Linguistics, Yale University Logophors: Looking Outside of Syntax I present evidence for the extra-syntactic nature of logophoric reflexives in English, based on sentence processing experimentation. To this end, I investigate the distinction bet

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_console9_2000/Abstracts/Burkhardt.pdf - 2025-01-10

No title

Quantifier Scope Interaction in Korean and English Introduction. The contrast in scope ambiguity between English and Korean in (1-2) has been a topic of research. Huang (1982: 220) and Hoji (1985: 248) argue that quantifier scope in languages like Korean, Chinese and Japanese is determined by the surface word order contra English. Recently, some researchers (Hornstein 1995 among others) proposed t

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_console9_2000/Abstracts/Choi.pdf - 2025-01-10

No title

Pronoun Doubling in the Dialects of Dutch We discuss subject pronoun doubling in the dialects of Dutch, of the type illustrated in (1). (1) Wij emme wij dat gedoan. wenom have wenom that done. æWe have done thatî In pronoun doubling constructions the second pronoun is always strong. The first pronoun can be either a clitic or a strong pronoun depending on the type of sentence it is in. The distrib

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_console9_2000/Abstracts/CraenenbroeckKoppen.pdf - 2025-01-10

No title

S YNTACTIC EVIDENCE IN FAVOR OF DEG REES OF INCO RP O RATION IN [ N+EG IN] CONS TRUCTIO NS ABS TRACT F requent constr ucts of the type [ N + E GI N] pl ay an i mport ant r ol e in the gramm ar of Basque as product i ve verbal complex for ms. In thi s paper we present a num ber of [Noun + EGIN] const ructs of Basque that der ive from transi ti ve pr edicates. An Incorpor ati on hypothesi s is propo

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_console9_2000/Abstracts/Etxarri.pdf - 2025-01-10

No title

Genitive of Negation and the Syntax of Scope This paper presents a new approach to direct objects under sentential negation in Russian based on a set of neglected data. It has long been observed that in Russian, direct objects can receive Genitive case under negation (GN), alternating with the canonical Accusative case (ACC) (see Babby 1980, Pesetsky 1982, Babyonyshev 1996, Brown 1999, et al.) as

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_console9_2000/Abstracts/Harves.pdf - 2025-01-10

No title

Raising and Multiple Agree in Japanese, Icelandic and beyond 1.:A Problem of AGREE: Chomsky(1998,1999) proposes the new ‘movement-less’ theory of feature- checking AGREE. However, the mechanism of AGREE poses one serious but interesting problem under the theory of Defective Intervention Constraint (DIC)(1) (Chomsky1998,1999, Boeckx2000, Ura2000b).(‘>’ is a c-command relation). (1) * > > ( is a p

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_console9_2000/Abstracts/Hiraiwa.pdf - 2025-01-10