11 Part III: Perception of Indexical Properties 13 Perception of Dialect Variation Perceptual classification of regional dialects Effects of dialect variation on speech perception and processing Challenges for the future REFERENCES 14 Who We Are: Signaling Personal Identity in Speech Acoustic components Recognition versus discrimination of voices Familiar and unfamiliar voices Personally familiar voices How many voices? A historical view of phonagnosia studies: Early lesion studies Neuroimaging studies of voice‐identity perception Other brain areas in voice perception Voice acquisition and memory storage: Familiar and unfamiliar voices Time course of voice‐identity processing Toward a model of voice‐identity perception Brain systems and networks in voice recognition REFERENCES 15 Perceptual Integration of Linguistic and Non‐Linguistic Properties of Speech Consequences of variation in spoken language Tracking systematic variation during the perception of speech Linguistic structure and talker recognition The informativeness of non‐linguistic variation Outstanding questions Conclusion REFERENCES 16 Perceptual Learning of Accented Speech Nonnative
Автор: | Группа авторов |
Издательство: | John Wiley & Sons Limited |
Серия: | |
Жанр произведения: | Языкознание |
Год издания: | 0 |
isbn: | 9781119184102 |

Stress in Speech Perception
Lexical stress and the vocabulary
Spoken‐word identification
New horizons for stress in speech perception
Conclusions
Acknowledgments
REFERENCES
10 Slips of the Ear
Challenges with observational data
Phonetics
The shape of words
Syntax and semantics
Slips of the ear in other languages
Conclusion
REFERENCES
11 Phonotactics in Spoken‐Word Recognition
What are phonotactics?
Milestones in research on phonotactics
Initial sensitivity to phonotactic patterns
Word segmentation and word learning
Spoken‐word recognition in adults
Representing phonotactic information in models of language processing
Network science: An alternative way to model phonotactic probability
Languages other than English
Phonotactic information in bilingual speakers
Implications for speech, language, and hearing disorders
Phonotactics in other contexts
Conclusion
REFERENCES
12 Perception of Formulaic Speech: Structural and Prosodic Characteristics of Formulaic Expressions
Background
Formulaic language in contemporary studies
Functions of formulaic expressions
Incidence of FEs in spoken language: Mental representation
Acquisition of FEs
Phonetics of FEs: Stereotyped patterns
Studies of comprehension and perception of FEs
Prosodic material differentiating FEs from novel expressions: Indirect measures
Summary of phonetic and prosody measures of FEs
Sarcasm
Neurology of FEs: Comprehension and production
Subcortical disorders
Dual‐process model of language processing
Summary
REFERENCES