Publications
990
Evidence for phonological processing deficits in less-skilled readers
Annals of Dyslexia, Vol. 45 pp. 51-78
1187
Gestures, features and segments in early child speech
In deGelder, B. & Morais, J. (Eds.), Speech and Reading: A Comparative Approach, Hove, England: Erlbaum (UK), Taylor & Francis,
987
Auditory temporal perception deficits in the reading-impaired: A critical review of the evidence
Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, Vol. 2 (4) pp. 508-514
931
Syllable Structure or Word Structure? Evidence for Onset and Rime Units with Disyllabic and Trisyllabic Stimuli
Journal of Memory and Language, Vol. 34 pp. 132-155
962
Directions in speech perception research
In G. Bloothooft, V. Hazan, D. Huber, and J. Llisterri (Eds.), European Studies in Phonetics and Speech Communication, Utrecht, Netherlands,
966
The universality of intrinsic F0 of vowels
Journal of Phonetics, Vol. 23 pp. 349-366
948
The effects of breath sounds on the perception of synthetic speech
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Vol. 97 (5) pp. 3147-3153
941
Intrinsic F0 of vowels in the babbling of 6-, 9-, and 12-month-old French- and English-learning infants
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Vol. 97 (4) pp. 2533-2539
904
Hemispheric contributions to the integration of visual and auditory information in speech perception
Perception & Psychophysics, Vol. 55 (6) pp. 633-641
946
Learning to Perceive the Sound Pattern of English
In C. Rovee-Collier and L. P. Lipsitt (Eds.), Advances in Infancy Research, ABLEX Publishing Corporation, Norwood, NJ, pp. 217-304
890
The Emergence of Native-Language Phonological Influences in Infants: A Perceptual Assimilation Model
In Goodman, J. C. and H. C. Nusbaum (Eds.), The Development of Speech Perception: The Transition from Speech Sounds to Spoken Words, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, pp. 167-224
918
Hemispheric Asymmetries in Adults' Perception of Infant Emotional Expressions
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, Vol. 20 (4) pp. 751-765
929
Training Phonological Awareness: A Study with Inner-City Kindergarten Children
Annals of Dyslexia, Vol. 44 pp. 26-59
956
“Targetless” schwa: an articulatory analysis
In G. J. Docherty & D. R. Ladd (Eds.), Papers in Laboratory Phonology II Gesture, Segment, Prosody, Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, pp. 26-67
896
OBSERVATIONS: Lexical Involvement in Naming Does not Contravene Prelexical Phonology: Comment on Sebastian-Galles
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, (1991)., Vol. 20 (1) pp. 192-198
917
Learning, Parsing, and Modularity
In C. Clifton, Jr., L. Frazier, & K. Rayner (Eds.), Perspectives on Sentence Processing, Lawrence Erlbaum, pp. 443-467
905
Attention mechanisms mediate the syntactic priming effect in auditory word identification
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, Vol. 20 (3) pp. 595-607
932
A review by Alice Faber of Phonological Development: Models, Research, Implications
Language and Speech, C. A. Ferguson, L. Menn, and C. Stoel-Gammon (eds.). Timonium, MD: York Press, 1992. 37(3), pp. 299-313
930
The Perceptual Infrastructure of Early Phonological Development
In S. D. Lima, R. L. Corrigan and G. K. Iverson (Eds.), The Reality of Linguistic Rules, John Benjamins Publishing Company: Amsterdam/Philadelphia, pp. 262-280
914
Beyond Orthography and Phonology: Differences between Inflections and Derivations
Journal of Memory & Language, Vol. 33 pp. 442-470
907
Morphological Analysis of Disrupted Morphemes: Evidence from Hebrew
The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, Vol. 47A (2) pp. 407-435
903
Invariants, specifiers, cues: An investigation of locus equations as information for place of articulation
Perception & Psychophysics, Vol. 55 (6) pp. 597-610
913
A Review by Carol Fowler of English Speech Rhythm by Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen
Language & Speech, Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1993. 346pp. 37(1), pp. 67-76
897
Prelexical and Postlexical Strategies in Reading: Evidence From a Deep and a Shallow Orthography
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, Vol. 20 (1) pp. 116-129
899
Some Organizational Characteristics of Speech Movement Control
Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, Vol. 37 pp. 4-27
926
Speech Motor Coordination and Control: Evidence from Lip, Jaw, and Laryngeal Movements
The Journal of Neuroscience, Vol. 14 (11) pp. 6585-6597
912
Tongue Body Kinematics in Velar Stop Production: Influences of Consonant Voicing and Vowel Context
Phonetica, Vol. 51 pp. 52-67
937
Speech motor control
Opinion in Neurobiology, Current, Vol. 4 pp. 823-826
927
Visual Lexical Access Is Initially Phonological: 2. Evidence From Phonological Priming by Homophones and Pseudohomophones
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, Vol. 123 (4) pp. 331-353
908
Visual Lexical Access is Initially Phonological: 1. Evidence From Associative Priming by Words, Homophones, and Pseudohomophones
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, Vol. 123 (2) pp. 107-128
935
Horizontal and vertical views of Chinese psycholinguistics
Advances in the Study of Chinese Language Processing, Vol. 1 pp. 541-547
934
Word Superiority in Chinese
Advances in the Study of Chinese Language Processing, Vol. 1 (17) pp. 101-111
910
A review by Ignatius G. Mattingly of The Linguistics of Literacy
Language & Speech, P. Downing, S. D. Lima, and M. Noonan (eds.), Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1992, xx, 334pp. 37(1), pp. 87-93
919
Recovering task dynamics from speech acoustics: Numerical results and the application of the method in speech technology
Proceedings of Technical Conference on Telecommunications, R & D in Massachusetts. University of Massachusetts, Lowell, MA, pp. 33-44
900
Recovering articulatory movement from formant frequency trajectories using task dynamics and a genetic algorithm: Preliminary model tests
Speech Communication, Vol. 14 pp. 19-48
1006
Lip-larynx coordination in speech: Effects of mechanical perturbations to the lower lip
Journal of the Acoustical Society, Vol. 95 (6) pp. 3605-3616
901
Phonological codes are early sources of constraint in visual semantic categorization
Perception & Psychophysics, Vol. 55 (5) pp. 497-504
915
Evidence of Flexible Coding in Visual Word Recognition
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, Vol. 20 (4) pp. 807-825
906
Neighborhood Effects in Visual Word Recognition: Effects of Letter Delay and Nonword Context Difficulty
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, Vol. 20 (3) pp. 639-648
889
On the Perceptual Organization of Speech
Psychological Review, Vol. 101 (1) pp. 129-156
933
A review by Bruno Repp of The Auditory Processing of Speech: From Sound to Words
Language and Speech, M. E. H. Schouten (ed.). Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 1992. 37(3), pp. 337-340
925
On Determining the Basic Tempo of an Expressive Music Performance
Psychology of Music, Vol. 22 pp. 157-167
916
Relational invariance of expressive microstructure across global tempo changes in music performance: An exploratory study
Psychological Research, Vol. 56 pp. 299-284
928
The Tritone Paradox and the Pitch Range of the Speaking Voice: A Dubious Connection
Music Perception, Vol. 12 (2) pp. 227-255
923
Musical motion: Some historical and contemporary perspectives
In A. Friberg, J. Iwarsson, E. Jansson and J. Sundberg (Eds.), Proceedings of the Stockholm Music Acoustics Conference July 28-August 1, 1993, Royal Swedish Academy of Music, SMAC 93, (No. 79) pp. 128-135
950
The Fate of Medialized Cartilage in Thyroplasty Type I
Archives of Otolaryngology \ Head & Neck Surgery, Vol. 120 pp. 1398-1399
911
A Review by Donald Shankweiler of Beginning to Spell by Rebecca Treiman
Language & Speech, New York: Oxford University Press, 1993. 37(1), pp. 77-79
924
A Review by Michael Studdert-Kennedy of Hand and Mind: What Gestures Reveal About Thought by David McNeill
Language & Speech, Chicago University Press, 1992. xi, 416 pp. 37(2), pp. 203-209
909
The Roles of the Posterior Cricoarytenoid and Thyropharyngeus Muscles in Whispered Speech
Folia Phoniatr Logop, Vol. 46 pp. 139-151
922
Subjective familiarity of English word/name homophones
Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, & Computers, Vol. 26 (4) pp. 402-408