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Posts by Lacey Wade

blue and green cover of the book "Sociophonetics: Implications for Phonological and Phonetic Theory", edited by Jennifer Nycz and Lauren Hall-Lew, published with Oxford as part of the Oxford Surveys in Phonology and Phonetics

blue and green cover of the book "Sociophonetics: Implications for Phonological and Phonetic Theory", edited by Jennifer Nycz and Lauren Hall-Lew, published with Oxford as part of the Oxford Surveys in Phonology and Phonetics

📚 Sociophonetics: Implications for Phonological and Phonetic Theory (co-edited by me and @lhlew.bsky.social) is now available online at Oxford Academic! (print copies coming end of January) academic.oup.com/book/61815

3 months ago 70 27 1 2
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Sage Journals: Discover world-class research Subscription and open access journals from Sage, the world's leading independent academic publisher.

My paper with Eunjong Kong on Korean "short tongue" pronunciation is finally out 🎉 Recently there has been more discussion of "short tongue" in the context of aegyo, a Korean cute speech register, and "short tongue" is one of its linguistic hallmarks. journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...

4 months ago 16 9 2 0
Introducing tidynorm – Væl Space Here’s a brief introduction to the new tidynorm package.

Introducing the tidynorm package! It's got convenience functions for applying your favorite vowel normalization methods to point measures, formant tracks, and DCT coefficients in a tidyverse workflow, as well as a flexible framework for defining your own normalization methods!

10 months ago 44 15 2 2
publishers marketplace screenshot: HOW TO NONBINARY A LANGUAGE by Kirby Conrod was sold at auction to Julia Steer at OUP by Kate McKean

publishers marketplace screenshot: HOW TO NONBINARY A LANGUAGE by Kirby Conrod was sold at auction to Julia Steer at OUP by Kate McKean

HEY SO I TO GET TO SHARE THIS NOW. REALLY EXCITED

1 year ago 365 73 31 14

Today I told some UK collaborators that we couldn’t have “dialect diversity” or “algorithmic bias” in the title of a grant that would be reviewed by the NEH. I have never felt less free to speak or do my job than I do right now.

1 year ago 70 22 1 1

At least 12 universities now have hiring freezes and nearly 30 have cut PhD admissions this year

If you hear of other places you can add them to this google doc:

1 year ago 692 349 19 18

The Democrats on the House Science Committee have set up a website to collect stories from fired federal employees, anonymously if desired. Please amplify. (This helps the lawyers establish standing for bringing legal cases against the administration!)

democrats-science.house.gov/sciencefirings

1 year ago 2263 1946 13 47

So one of the things that I think is lost on AI proponents is what I call the card catalog effect, a thing I shouldn’t call it because a lot of people probably have no experience with a card catalog.

1 year ago 3676 1109 108 451

THE BUNNY PAPER HAS BEEN PUBLISHED!!

www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

#linguistics 🐦

1 year ago 99 35 2 5
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The notion that Trump's "I'm king" tweet is "just trolling" or "a joke" presents an opportunity to recreate my just-joking thread (porting it over from the Bad Place):

1. I wrote my PhD dissertation on the social function of humor (in literature & film) and here's the thing about "just joking."

1 year ago 3409 1262 108 270

Hey, this was my first qualifying paper! Believe me, conservatives think gender-neutral language is *literally* evil, and masculine marked role nouns are their weapon of choice

1 year ago 13 4 2 0

Super great that one of the major funding bodies that supports my physics research is now officially in opposition to me being the one to do it.

1 year ago 3882 815 52 24
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This goes so fucking hard dude

1 year ago 16360 5798 23 45

American science and medicine has been thrown into chaos and uncertainty over the past week. Here are some stories to get up to speed. 1/12

1 year ago 1823 1137 57 189
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This week, the Linguistics Department invites you to our undergraduate Research Symposium, where some of our students are presenting original research. Lila Church is giving a talk featuring her honors thesis on storytelling in indigenous language education. /1

1 year ago 7 2 2 1

Me: Why did the chicken cross the road?
3-year-old: Chicken who?
Me: No you’re supposed to say “I don’t know, why?”
3: I don’t know, why?
Me: To get to the other side!
3: *laughs wildly*
3:
3: The other side who?

#AllJokesAreKnockKnockJokesWhenYoure3

1 year ago 3 0 0 0

Dear students. Your professors have meals with, hang out with, share social media with, and drink with, the people you are citing. If the LLM you used says something off the wall, I will hunt it down because I'm going to go, "That person doesn't think that; we talked about it over manhattans!"

1 year ago 46 7 0 0
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The way I felt seeing this is also how I feel when my students turn in AI responses and then are flabbergasted that I can tell.

2 years ago 162 42 3 0
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KU Linguistics was represented at NWAV 52 in Miami this weekend by Prof. Lacey Wade (center) and 4th year student Tyler Hausthor (right), who gave a talk entitled, "What makes a speaker sound Kansan?" 🌻 They also caught up with KU Linguistics BA alum Griffin Lowry (left)!

1 year ago 8 2 1 0
PLC 48 will take place on March 16–17 in Philadelphia with keynote speaker Vera Gribanova, panelists Dan Swingley, Jane Chandless, and Micha Elsner, and moderator Charles Yang

PLC 48 will take place on March 16–17 in Philadelphia with keynote speaker Vera Gribanova, panelists Dan Swingley, Jane Chandless, and Micha Elsner, and moderator Charles Yang

Abstracts for the 48th Penn Linguistics Conference are due Nov 17!

PLC is run by Penn Ling grad students and we welcome a wide variety of submissions from faculty, students (graduate and undergraduate), and independent researchers.

More details here: www.ling.upenn.edu/Events/PLC/p...

2 years ago 10 6 0 0
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Dialect experience modulates cue reliance in sociolinguistic convergence Author(s): Wade, Lacey R; Embick, David; Tamminga, Meredith | Abstract: Expectation-driven convergence occurs when speakers shift their speech to approximate the language they expect rather than obser...

escholarship.org/uc/item/2h31...

2 years ago 3 1 0 0
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Dialect experience modulates cue reliance in sociolinguistic convergence Author(s): Wade, Lacey R; Embick, David; Tamminga, Meredith | Abstract: Expectation-driven convergence occurs when speakers shift their speech to approximate the language they expect rather than obser...

Ooh, thanks for catching this. Copy-paste fail. Link here doi.org/10.5070/G601...

2 years ago 2 0 1 1
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Cool bonus finding that lower frequency items show more convergence (even though ppl aren’t actually hearing the words—or even vowel—they are imitating). Implications for the mechanism behind frequency effects in convergence more generally?

2 years ago 1 0 0 0

Non-Southerners converge toward monophthongal /ay/ if they are simply *told* they are listening to a southerner (even if they aren’t!)

2 years ago 0 0 1 0

Southerners converge toward monophthongal /ay/ (a feature of Southern US speech) when they hear *other* southern-accented features, even if they think the speaker is from somewhere else—like Ohio!

2 years ago 1 0 1 0
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escholarship.org/uc/item/2h3118…
New paper out in @glossapsycholx.bsky.social w/ Dave Embick and Meredith Tamminga showing that experience with a given dialect modulates which cues participants use when converging toward a speaker of that dialect.

2 years ago 34 10 3 0
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Mug with three birds and three IPA flap symbols turned upside so it reads “JJJ” with upside down birds.

Mug with three birds and three IPA flap symbols turned upside so it reads “JJJ” with upside down birds.

My favorite mug is my “JJJ” mug because every time I use it I think about the person printing the mug designs taking the initiative to turn the design upside down because “JJJ” with upside down birds obvs makes more sense than the alternative.

2 years ago 5 0 0 0