The Handbook of Speech Perception. Группа авторов
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
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