Top> Poster session 2 (Jan. 26, 2013)

Poster session 2 (Jan. 26, 2013)

1. Yoko Mori (Doshisha University) [abstract]
  "Rhythmic aspects of minor phrase formation in Japanese sentences"

2. Mariko Sugahara (Doshisha University) [abstract]
  "Identification of English primary stress by Japanese listeners and bias toward word-final stress:
  due to F0 patterns or an influence from Japanese loanword accent?"

3. Anastasia Karlsson and Arthur Holmer (Lund University) [abstract]
  "Correlation between word order and intonation in two verb-initial Formosan languages"

4. Pierre Fournier and Sophie Vanhoutte (University of Paris 13 / University of Tours) [abstract]
  "Stress in Japanese loanwords in English: Faithfulness or adaptation?"

5. Gakuji Kumagai (Tokyo Metropolitan University) [abstract]
  "Hidden native phonology of Tokyo Japanese accentuation"

6. Joseph Perry (University of Cambridge) [abstract]
  "On tone and syntax in two Tibetan varieties"

7. Karen Huang (University of Auckland) [abstract]
  "The future development of the neutral tone in Taiwan Mandarin: another neutralization?"

8. Pinter Gabor, Shinobu Mizuguchi and Kazuhito Yamato (Kobe University) [abstract]
  "Prosody perception by Japanese learners of English"

9. Ao Chen and René Kager (Utrecht University) [abstract]
  "Tone neutralization in Mandarin T3 sandhi: A perceptual account"

10. Jose Joaquin Atria and Valerie Hazan (University College London) [abstract]
  "Bilateral perception of Spanish and Japanese word accent by L2 learners"

11. Donna M. Erickson and Caroline Menezes
  (Showa Music University / University of Toledo) [abstract]
  "Articulatory implementation of phrasal accents in spoken English"

12. Masahiko Masuda (Kyushu University) [abstract]
  "Tonal neutralizations in Northern Wu Chinese"

13. Nicholas Bacuez (The University of Texas at Austin) [abstract]
  "Analytical pattern recognition of intonation contours:
  Automated tonal labeling and class feature extraction using linguistic fuzzy quantifiers"

14. Youngah Do and Michael Kenstowicz (MIT) [abstract]
  "The base in Korean noun paradigms: Evidence from tone"