Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Association for Laboratory Phonology

Registration | Labphon

Registration for #LabPhon20 in Montreal is now open! Early registration is available through April 30, 2026. All registrants must be members of the Association for Laboratory Phonology.

labphon.org/labphon20/re...

2 weeks ago 1 2 0 0
Preview
Timing lag matters in native speakers' perception of Georgian stop sequences This study tests the hypothesis that timing lag is part of phonological knowledge, investigating Georgian speakers’ perceptual recoverability of C1 consonantal gestures in stop-stop sequences. We hypo...

In languages like #Georgian, words can begin with complex C1C2 stop-stop sequences (gd, bg). Do their speakers rely on the timing of the 2 consonants to accurately recover C1? Results suggest timing lag is in #phonological grammar. #LabPhon #openaccess @efl-upcite.bsky.social doi.org/10.16995/lab...

3 weeks ago 3 2 0 0
Preview
Expecting a challenge: A behavioral and neurophysiological investigation of talker identity in cross-dialectal speech perception Listeners use their knowledge about a talker to guide speech perception. In the present study,we manipulated both the familiarity and predictability of this talker-specific knowledge. Twenty-two liste...

Listeners use their knowledge about a speaker to guide #speechperception. How do familiarity with a speaker’s dialect & predictability of the dialect a speaker uses impact processing? ERP results show accent info is used to fine-tune speech recognition. doi.org/10.16995/lab... #openaccess #LabPhon

3 weeks ago 4 1 0 0
Preview
Phonetic correlates of prefixedness in four varieties of English Studies show that phonetic detail signals morphological structure. Previous studies of English prefixes examined one dialect and speech style, and/or measured only duration. This study examines phonet...

In ordinary conversation are 'mis' and 'dis' pronounced differently in prefixed than in nonprefixed words, like 'mistimes' vs. 'mistakes'? Yes! but phonetic details differ by dialect, syllable structure, stress patterns & other factors. #LabPhon #openaccess doi.org/10.16995/lab... @jbhay.bsky.social

3 weeks ago 3 1 0 0
Preview
Disentangling acoustic and social biases in creaky voice perception: The effects of f0 and face gender on creakiness ratings Creaky voice has historically been associated with men’s speech, supported by acoustic studies. Since around 2010, however, sociolinguistic work alongside public discourse has perpetuated greater crea...

Women are often associated with #creakyvoice. Do listeners actually hear them as sounding creakier? A #matchedguise study finds that lower pitch makes voices sound creakier, but face gender has little effect, casting doubt on this posited perceptual bias. #LabPhon #openaccess doi.org/10.16995/lab...

3 weeks ago 3 1 0 0
Preview
Experimental priming of phonological variant identification In conversational speech, it has been observed that speakers tend to reuse the variant that they have recently used. This recency effect, also called 'persistence' or 'repetitiveness', has often been ...

Speakers often reuse the variant they've recently used in conversational speech. Does #priming drive this repetitiveness? A study on English ING demonstrates clear #phonological variant priming—but the effect decays rapidly, after only 1 intervening word. #openaccess #LabPhon doi.org/10.16995/lab...

3 weeks ago 4 1 0 0

@msonderegger.bsky.social and #LabPhon20 colleagues, can you offer insight here?

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
Advertisement
Preview
Exploring the social meaning of the ‘leader-lagger’ vowels in New Zealand English Clusters of New Zealand English (NZE) monophthongs systematically covary across speakers (Brand et al., 2021; Hurring et al., 2025), meaning information about how a speaker realises one vowel also giv...

Pronunciation of New Zealand English monophthongs varies across speakers, distinguishing ‘leaders’ from ‘laggers’ of ongoing sound changes. But do listeners make social judgements based on these vowels? Yes! doi.org/10.16995/lab... @jbhay.bsky.social @joshwilsonblack.bsky.social #LabPhon #openaccess

1 month ago 5 2 0 0
Preview
Association for Laboratory Phonology (LabPhon) | LinkedIn Association for Laboratory Phonology (LabPhon) | An international body of scholars committed to advancing knowledge on the phonetics and phonology of human languages | The Association for Laboratory P...

Hey #LabPhon community, the Association is growing its social media offerings. Join us over on LinkedIn, as well!

www.linkedin.com/company/labp...

2 months ago 0 1 0 0
Preview
Cross-linguistic phonetic recalibration in bilingual lexical processing The study explores phonetic recalibration as a novel method for investigating sound-category linkages across languages, by examining cross-linguistic generalization of phoneme retuning among Spanish-E...

Are sound categories separate or integrated across languages in #bilingual speakers? Phonetic recalibration suggests asymmetrical linkages across languages, in this study of cross-linguistic generalization of phoneme retuning by #Spanish–English speakers. #openaccess #LabPhon doi.org/10.16995/lab...

2 months ago 1 0 0 0
Preview
Adventures in /Ɂ/ The glottal stop is a speech sound with varying functions. It can occur as a phoneme in its own right, as a marker of prosodic boundaries, as a replacement of oral stops, and as the replacement for le...

What happens when a speech sound is both everywhere and nowhere? @holmit.bsky.social shows that glottal stop /ʔ/ differently affects lexical access in #German and #Maltese, in ways that are counterintuitive to its phonemic status in those languages. doi.org/10.16995/lab... #LabPhon #openaccess

2 months ago 6 4 0 0
Preview
Phrasing and prominence disambiguate clefted Relative Clauses We investigated the prosodic disambiguation of string-identical it-clefts with Connected Clauses(-Who sang? -It was [the editor] [that sang]) versus clefted Relative Clauses (-Who called? -Itwas [the ...

Without #prosody, cleft sentences hide an understudied ambiguity: "It was the man that fell" answers "Who fell?” but ALSO infinite competing questions like "Who cried?”. Prosody supports resolving such ambiguities in both #production and #comprehension. doi.org/10.16995/lab... #LabPhon #openaccess

3 months ago 2 0 0 0
Preview
A multi-cue study to the interpretation of German information-seeking and rhetorical questions The meaning of an utterance can be conveyed by a number of prosodic cues, but their relative contribution is often unclear. We tested the interpretation of German questions as information-seeking (Exp...

Is there a rhetorical question “tune”? In an active-learning scenario testing relative cue weights, individual tonal cues have more impact on question interpretation in #German than tone combinations or non-tonal cues like voice quality or duration. #openaccess #LabPhon doi.org/10.16995/lab...

3 months ago 2 1 0 0
Preview
Morphological effects in speech reduction are speaker specific and may partly originate from the words’ most frequent phonological context Recently, a number of studies have investigated whether the morphological status of a segment (e.g., whether a segment is part of a stem, a noun suffix, or verb suffix) affects its pronunciation. Most...

Are morphological effects on phonetic #reduction byproducts of phonological context? Patterns of reduction by #Dutch final /ən/ show that some, not all, differences across #morphological categories can be explained by words' typical #phonological context. doi.org/10.16995/lab... #openaccess #LabPhon

4 months ago 0 0 0 0
Advertisement
Listeners use speaker gender information in non-native phoneme categorization Speaker gender is known to affect phoneme categorization, and this effect is especially well-established in fricative perception: For example, in /s/-/θ/ categorization tasks, more /θ/ responses are g...

In #speechperception, listener expectations, e.g. about how sounds produced by men & women differ, can influence phoneme categorization. Do #L2 listeners use expectations about speaker gender even for contrasts absent from their #L1? #LabPhon #openaccess @isf-oeaw.bsky.social doi.org/10.16995/lab...

4 months ago 8 3 0 0
Preview
Syllable structure and lexical pitch accent in Split Croatian Contour tones in most languages are restricted to relatively sonorous syllable types. Relatively rare are languages that permit contour tones on all syllables, including less sonorous ones. There is a...

Most languages phonologically restrict #contour #tones to more sonorous syllable types. How does #Split #Croatian, a language that permits contour tone crowding on all syllables, phonetically accommodate contours even for short vowels and obstruent codas? #LabPhon #openaccess doi.org/10.16995/lab...

4 months ago 2 0 0 0
Preview
The acquisition of L2 English complex onsets by L1 Farsi speakers Much previous work has shown that sibilant-initial complex onsets (SC onsets) differ in their typological, phonological, articulatory, and acquisitional properties from other onsets. The exact mechani...

Complex onsets that begin with #sibilants differ from other complex onsets in their phonological properties, articulation, and acquisition. What makes them special?

#LabPhon #Farsi #L2Phonology #epenthesis #openaccess

doi.org/10.16995/lab...

5 months ago 0 0 0 0
Preview
Investigating potential MERGED and DISTINCT speakers in an ongoing merger — Evidence from production and perception This study investigates whether it is possible to use evidence from production and perception to identify different types of speakers in the study of the ongoing merger of /ʃ/ and /ç/ in Norwegian. Sp...

Can we reliably identify MERGED vs. DISTINCT speakers during ongoing sound change? #Acoustics + #perception data from #Norwegian /ʃ, ç/ show that a principled boundary between speaker groups does not exist. doi.org/10.16995/lab...
#openaccess #LabPhon @timoroettger.bsky.social @stausland.bsky.social

6 months ago 7 2 0 0
Preview
The effects of contextual tonal variation on Cantonese tone merging Previous studies on Cantonese tone merging have examined monosyllabic materials so far, yet disyllabic words are common in daily conversation. Sound change often originates from a pool of synchronic v...

Q: How does tonal coarticulation in disyllabic words of #Cantonese contribute to tone merging and inform research on #soundchange? A: The two interact dynamically, with carryover effects in extreme tonal contexts emerging as an important source of change. #LabPhon #openaccess doi.org/10.16995/lab...

6 months ago 3 3 0 0
The production and perception of Low Tone Alternations in Huaiyuan Chinese Huaiyuan Mandarin is a Mandarin dialect that has three low-tone sandhi rules. T1 (low-falling) and T3 (low falling-rising) sandhis involve changing the first low tone to a mid-rising tone when two low...

When a tone in #Huaiyuan #Chinese changes to sound like another is it a perfect copy, or can listeners still hear a difference? An investigation of tone sandhi suggests that neutralization of perceptual categories can override subtle acoustic differences. doi.org/10.16995/lab...
#LabPhon #openaccess

7 months ago 1 0 0 0
Qualtrics Survey | Qualtrics Experience Management The most powerful, simple and trusted way to gather experience data. Start your journey to experience management and try a free account today.

Take a short SURVEY to help #LabPhon20 organizers understand what might constrain in-person conference attendance, given issues of immigration, funding, and accessibility. We strive to make a realistic and equitable conference plan, including for students.

ubc.ca1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_...

7 months ago 1 2 0 0

Convening for #LabPhon20 in Montreal is an opportunity to celebrate 40 years of #LabPhon.

We invite the ALP community to gather videos, pictures, memories, & artifacts from the last 4 decades, for presentation in Montreal. To help curate and organize materials, please contact labphon20@gmail.com.

7 months ago 4 1 0 0
Call for Papers & Satellite Workshops | Labphon

CALL FOR PAPERS, #LabPhon20:
Deadline to submit abstracts is Dec 1, 2025. Abstract guidelines and submission link available in Oct 2025.

CALL FOR SATELLITE WORKSHOP PROPOSALS: Deadline for satellite workshop proposals is Nov 1, 2025. Events' date is June 25, 2026.

labphon.org/labphon20/ca...

7 months ago 5 5 0 0
Advertisement
Home | Labphon

The conference website for #LabPhon20 is now live: labphon.org/labphon20/home

#LabPhon 20 will happen in #Montréal, Québec, Canada, June 26–28, 2026, with additional pre-conference events on June 25. The call for papers and proposals for satellite workshops will be circulated in late August 2025.

9 months ago 12 9 0 0
Summer 2025 Workshop | Labphon

We are excited to announce our #LabPhon Association's 2025 off-season programming, a series of three events on #prosody and #suprasegmentals. All events are scheduled during July and August, and they're FREE for ALP members. 😎 🌞 Info and registration are available here: labphon.org/content/summ...

9 months ago 7 5 0 0
Preview
A new perspective on the development of Quebec French rhotic vowels Quebec French is reportedly developing rhoticity, with low F3 resulting from a bunched or retroflexed tongue (like English /ɚ/), in some or all of the front mid rounded vowels /ø, œ, œ̃ /. The source ...

How do rare sound changes, like the development of rhotic vowels, actuate and spread? @massimolipari.github.io and @msonderegger.bsky.social show that rhotacization of 3 #QuebecFrench vowels emerges from an interplay of social + phonological pressures. #LabPhon #openaccess doi.org/10.16995/lab...

9 months ago 3 0 0 0
How final is final: The production and perception of utterance-medial and utterance-final boundaries We examine the production and perception of two types of phrase-final prosodic boundaries, specifically, utterance-medial and utterance-final intonation phrase (IP) boundaries in German. These two typ...

New insights into German #prosody! How do speakers & listeners distinguish utterance-medial vs. utterance-final #intonation boundaries in #German? Subtle differences in intonation, particularly in the rhyme's f0, are key cues for listeners. #LabPhon #openaccess #kinematics doi.org/10.16995/lab...

10 months ago 8 3 0 0
Preview
Final Devoicing before it happens: A large-scale study of word-final obstruents in French This paper investigates the phonetic precursors of Final Devoicing in a large corpus of natural French speech. We argue that this evaluation should consider the magnitude of the [voice] contrast, rath...

Is final devoicing as well-understood as we think? A new #LabPhon paper uses large #French corpora + Bayesian modeling to show its phonetic precursors fit typology better when viewed as multidimensional contrast neutralization. #openaccess doi.org/10.16995/lab...

10 months ago 2 1 0 0
Preview
Learning new speech sounds in remote and in-person protocols: Benefits, drawbacks, and considerations for future research In-laboratory training of novel speech sounds has provided significant insight into how adult language learners learn new sounds. However, this training is often costly in terms of time in lab for par...

New in #LabPhon: How well do adult language learners acquire new sound contrasts, in remote vs. in-laboratory environments? Results show that both paradigms result in learning, but there are trade-offs in both protocol types. @m2b2.bsky.social @spplab.bsky.social #openaccess doi.org/10.16995/lab...

11 months ago 9 4 0 0
Preview
Linguistic experience and social factors in speech perception: the case of merged speakers of Mandarin sibilants This work explores the combined effects of social expectations and a speaker’s production characteristics on the perception of alveolar versus retroflex sibilants that are variably merged in Taiwan Ma...

How are social expectations employed in cases of mergers in progress? A study of #TaiwanMandarin #sibilants finds that merged speakers may be somewhat desensitized to acoustic cues, but they readily employ social cues in speech perception. #sociophonetics #openaccess #LabPhon doi.org/10.16995/lab...

1 year ago 4 3 0 0