Oxford Handbook of Language Prosody
Oxford Handbook of Language Prosody
Gussenhoven, Carlos; Chen, Aoju
Oxford University Press
12/2020
960
Dura
Inglês
9780198832232
15 a 20 dias
2
Descrição não disponível.
1: Carlos Gussenhoven and Aoju Chen: Introduction
Part I: Fundamentals of Language Prosody
2: Taehong Cho and Doris Muecke: Articulatory measures of prosody
3: Oliver Niebuhr, Henning Reetz, Jonathan Barnes, and Alan C.L. Yu: Fundamental aspects in the perception of f0
Part II: Prosody and Linguistic Structure
4: Larry M. Hyman and William R. Leben: Tone systems
5: Matthew K. Gordon and Harry van der Hulst: Word-stress systems
6: Amalia Arvaniti and Janet Fletcher: The Autosegmental-Metrical theory of intonation phonology
7: John J. McCarthy: Prosodic morphology
8: Wendy Sandler, Diane Lillo-Martin, Svetlana Dachkovsky, and Ronice Mueller de Quadros: Sign language prosody
Part III: Prosody in Speech Production
9: Jonathan Barnes, Hansjoerg Mixdorff, and Oliver Niebuhr: Phonetic variation in tone and intonation systems
10: Vincent J. van Heuven and Alice Turk: Phonetic correlates of word and sentence stress
11: Laurence White and Zofia Malisz: Speech rhythm and timing
Part IV: Prosody across the World
12: Larry M. Hyman, Hannah Sande, Florian Lionnet, Nicholas Rolle, and Emily Clem: Sub-Saharan Africa
13: Sam Hellmuth and Mary Pearce: North Africa and the Middle East
14: Anastasia Karlsson, Gueliz Guenes, Hamed Rahmani, and Sun-Ah Jun: South West and Central Asia
15: Maciej Karpinski, Bistra Andreeva, Eva Liina Asu, Anna Daugavet, Stefan Benus, and Katalin Mady: Central and Eastern Europe
16: Mariapaola D'Imperio, Barbara Gili Fivela, Mary Baltazani, Brechtje Post, and Alexandra Vella: Southern Europe
17: Sonia Frota, Pilar Prieto, and Gorka Elordieta: Iberia
18: Tomas Riad and Joerg Peters: Northwestern Europe
19: Martine Grice, James Sneed German, and Paul Warren: Varieties of English
20: Kristjan Arnason, Anja Arnhold, Ailbhe Ni Chasaide, Nicole Dehe, Amelie Dorn, and Osahito Miyaoka: The North Atlantic and the Arctic
21: Aditi Lahiri and Holly J. Kennard: The Indian Subcontinent
22: Jie Zhang, San Duanmu, and Yiya Chen: China and Siberia
23: Marc Brunelle, James Kirby, Alexis Michaud, and Justin Watkins: Mainland Southeast Asia
24: Sun-Ah Jun and Haruo Kubozono: Asian Pacific Rim
25: Nikolaus P. Himmelmann and Daniel Kaufman: Austronesia
26: Brett Baker, Janet Fletcher, and Mark Donohue: Australia and New Guinea
27: Gabriela Caballero and Matthew K. Gordon: North America
28: Christian DiCanio and Ryan Bennett: Mesoamerica
29: Thiago Costa Chacon and Fernando O. de Carvalho: South America
Part V: Prosody in Communication
30: Matthijs Westera, Daniel Goodhue, and Carlos Gussenhoven: Meanings of tones and tunes
31: Frank Kuegler and Sasha Calhoun: Prosodic encoding of information structure: A typological perspective
32: Julia Hirschberg, Stefan Benus, Agustin Gravano, and Rivka Levitan: Prosody in discourse and speaker state
33: Marc Swerts and Emiel Krahmer: Visual prosody across cultures
34: Diana Van Lancker Sidtis and Seung-yun Yang: Pathological prosody: overview, assessment, and treatment
Part VI: Prosody and Language Processing
35: Joseph C.Y. Lau, Zilong Xie, Bharath Chandrasekaran, and Patrick C.M. Wong: Cortical and subcortical processing of linguistic pitch patterns
36: James M. McQueen and Laura C. Dilley: Prosody and spoken-word recognition
37: Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel: The role of phrase-level prosody in speech production planning
Part VII: Prosody and Language Acquisition
38: Paula Fikkert, Liquan Liu, and Mitsuhiko Ota: The acquisition of word prosody
39: Aoju Chen, Nuria Esteve-Gibert, Pilar Prieto, and Melissa A. Redford: Development in phrase-level prosody from infancy to late childhood
40: Judit Gervain, Anne Christophe, and Reiko Mazuka: Prosodic bootstrapping
41: Melanie Soderstrom and Heather Bortfeld: Prosody in infant- and child-directed speech
42: Rhea Paul, Elizabeth Schoen Simmons, and James Mahshie: Prosody in children with atypical development
43: Allard Jongman and Annie Tremblay: Word prosody in L2
44: Juergen Trouvain and Bettina Braun: Sentence prosody in a second language
45: Dorothy M. Chun and John M. Levis: Prosody in L2 teaching: methodologies and effectiveness
Part VIII Prosody in Technology and the Arts
46: Anton Batliner and Bernd Moebius: Prosody in automatic speech processing
47: Andrew Rosenberg and Mark Hasegawa-Johnson: Automatic prosody labeling and assessment
48: Paul Kiparsky: Stress, meter, and text-setting
49: D. Robert Ladd and James Kirby: Tone-melody matching in tone language singing
References
Index of languages
Index of subjects
Part I: Fundamentals of Language Prosody
2: Taehong Cho and Doris Muecke: Articulatory measures of prosody
3: Oliver Niebuhr, Henning Reetz, Jonathan Barnes, and Alan C.L. Yu: Fundamental aspects in the perception of f0
Part II: Prosody and Linguistic Structure
4: Larry M. Hyman and William R. Leben: Tone systems
5: Matthew K. Gordon and Harry van der Hulst: Word-stress systems
6: Amalia Arvaniti and Janet Fletcher: The Autosegmental-Metrical theory of intonation phonology
7: John J. McCarthy: Prosodic morphology
8: Wendy Sandler, Diane Lillo-Martin, Svetlana Dachkovsky, and Ronice Mueller de Quadros: Sign language prosody
Part III: Prosody in Speech Production
9: Jonathan Barnes, Hansjoerg Mixdorff, and Oliver Niebuhr: Phonetic variation in tone and intonation systems
10: Vincent J. van Heuven and Alice Turk: Phonetic correlates of word and sentence stress
11: Laurence White and Zofia Malisz: Speech rhythm and timing
Part IV: Prosody across the World
12: Larry M. Hyman, Hannah Sande, Florian Lionnet, Nicholas Rolle, and Emily Clem: Sub-Saharan Africa
13: Sam Hellmuth and Mary Pearce: North Africa and the Middle East
14: Anastasia Karlsson, Gueliz Guenes, Hamed Rahmani, and Sun-Ah Jun: South West and Central Asia
15: Maciej Karpinski, Bistra Andreeva, Eva Liina Asu, Anna Daugavet, Stefan Benus, and Katalin Mady: Central and Eastern Europe
16: Mariapaola D'Imperio, Barbara Gili Fivela, Mary Baltazani, Brechtje Post, and Alexandra Vella: Southern Europe
17: Sonia Frota, Pilar Prieto, and Gorka Elordieta: Iberia
18: Tomas Riad and Joerg Peters: Northwestern Europe
19: Martine Grice, James Sneed German, and Paul Warren: Varieties of English
20: Kristjan Arnason, Anja Arnhold, Ailbhe Ni Chasaide, Nicole Dehe, Amelie Dorn, and Osahito Miyaoka: The North Atlantic and the Arctic
21: Aditi Lahiri and Holly J. Kennard: The Indian Subcontinent
22: Jie Zhang, San Duanmu, and Yiya Chen: China and Siberia
23: Marc Brunelle, James Kirby, Alexis Michaud, and Justin Watkins: Mainland Southeast Asia
24: Sun-Ah Jun and Haruo Kubozono: Asian Pacific Rim
25: Nikolaus P. Himmelmann and Daniel Kaufman: Austronesia
26: Brett Baker, Janet Fletcher, and Mark Donohue: Australia and New Guinea
27: Gabriela Caballero and Matthew K. Gordon: North America
28: Christian DiCanio and Ryan Bennett: Mesoamerica
29: Thiago Costa Chacon and Fernando O. de Carvalho: South America
Part V: Prosody in Communication
30: Matthijs Westera, Daniel Goodhue, and Carlos Gussenhoven: Meanings of tones and tunes
31: Frank Kuegler and Sasha Calhoun: Prosodic encoding of information structure: A typological perspective
32: Julia Hirschberg, Stefan Benus, Agustin Gravano, and Rivka Levitan: Prosody in discourse and speaker state
33: Marc Swerts and Emiel Krahmer: Visual prosody across cultures
34: Diana Van Lancker Sidtis and Seung-yun Yang: Pathological prosody: overview, assessment, and treatment
Part VI: Prosody and Language Processing
35: Joseph C.Y. Lau, Zilong Xie, Bharath Chandrasekaran, and Patrick C.M. Wong: Cortical and subcortical processing of linguistic pitch patterns
36: James M. McQueen and Laura C. Dilley: Prosody and spoken-word recognition
37: Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel: The role of phrase-level prosody in speech production planning
Part VII: Prosody and Language Acquisition
38: Paula Fikkert, Liquan Liu, and Mitsuhiko Ota: The acquisition of word prosody
39: Aoju Chen, Nuria Esteve-Gibert, Pilar Prieto, and Melissa A. Redford: Development in phrase-level prosody from infancy to late childhood
40: Judit Gervain, Anne Christophe, and Reiko Mazuka: Prosodic bootstrapping
41: Melanie Soderstrom and Heather Bortfeld: Prosody in infant- and child-directed speech
42: Rhea Paul, Elizabeth Schoen Simmons, and James Mahshie: Prosody in children with atypical development
43: Allard Jongman and Annie Tremblay: Word prosody in L2
44: Juergen Trouvain and Bettina Braun: Sentence prosody in a second language
45: Dorothy M. Chun and John M. Levis: Prosody in L2 teaching: methodologies and effectiveness
Part VIII Prosody in Technology and the Arts
46: Anton Batliner and Bernd Moebius: Prosody in automatic speech processing
47: Andrew Rosenberg and Mark Hasegawa-Johnson: Automatic prosody labeling and assessment
48: Paul Kiparsky: Stress, meter, and text-setting
49: D. Robert Ladd and James Kirby: Tone-melody matching in tone language singing
References
Index of languages
Index of subjects
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
1: Carlos Gussenhoven and Aoju Chen: Introduction
Part I: Fundamentals of Language Prosody
2: Taehong Cho and Doris Muecke: Articulatory measures of prosody
3: Oliver Niebuhr, Henning Reetz, Jonathan Barnes, and Alan C.L. Yu: Fundamental aspects in the perception of f0
Part II: Prosody and Linguistic Structure
4: Larry M. Hyman and William R. Leben: Tone systems
5: Matthew K. Gordon and Harry van der Hulst: Word-stress systems
6: Amalia Arvaniti and Janet Fletcher: The Autosegmental-Metrical theory of intonation phonology
7: John J. McCarthy: Prosodic morphology
8: Wendy Sandler, Diane Lillo-Martin, Svetlana Dachkovsky, and Ronice Mueller de Quadros: Sign language prosody
Part III: Prosody in Speech Production
9: Jonathan Barnes, Hansjoerg Mixdorff, and Oliver Niebuhr: Phonetic variation in tone and intonation systems
10: Vincent J. van Heuven and Alice Turk: Phonetic correlates of word and sentence stress
11: Laurence White and Zofia Malisz: Speech rhythm and timing
Part IV: Prosody across the World
12: Larry M. Hyman, Hannah Sande, Florian Lionnet, Nicholas Rolle, and Emily Clem: Sub-Saharan Africa
13: Sam Hellmuth and Mary Pearce: North Africa and the Middle East
14: Anastasia Karlsson, Gueliz Guenes, Hamed Rahmani, and Sun-Ah Jun: South West and Central Asia
15: Maciej Karpinski, Bistra Andreeva, Eva Liina Asu, Anna Daugavet, Stefan Benus, and Katalin Mady: Central and Eastern Europe
16: Mariapaola D'Imperio, Barbara Gili Fivela, Mary Baltazani, Brechtje Post, and Alexandra Vella: Southern Europe
17: Sonia Frota, Pilar Prieto, and Gorka Elordieta: Iberia
18: Tomas Riad and Joerg Peters: Northwestern Europe
19: Martine Grice, James Sneed German, and Paul Warren: Varieties of English
20: Kristjan Arnason, Anja Arnhold, Ailbhe Ni Chasaide, Nicole Dehe, Amelie Dorn, and Osahito Miyaoka: The North Atlantic and the Arctic
21: Aditi Lahiri and Holly J. Kennard: The Indian Subcontinent
22: Jie Zhang, San Duanmu, and Yiya Chen: China and Siberia
23: Marc Brunelle, James Kirby, Alexis Michaud, and Justin Watkins: Mainland Southeast Asia
24: Sun-Ah Jun and Haruo Kubozono: Asian Pacific Rim
25: Nikolaus P. Himmelmann and Daniel Kaufman: Austronesia
26: Brett Baker, Janet Fletcher, and Mark Donohue: Australia and New Guinea
27: Gabriela Caballero and Matthew K. Gordon: North America
28: Christian DiCanio and Ryan Bennett: Mesoamerica
29: Thiago Costa Chacon and Fernando O. de Carvalho: South America
Part V: Prosody in Communication
30: Matthijs Westera, Daniel Goodhue, and Carlos Gussenhoven: Meanings of tones and tunes
31: Frank Kuegler and Sasha Calhoun: Prosodic encoding of information structure: A typological perspective
32: Julia Hirschberg, Stefan Benus, Agustin Gravano, and Rivka Levitan: Prosody in discourse and speaker state
33: Marc Swerts and Emiel Krahmer: Visual prosody across cultures
34: Diana Van Lancker Sidtis and Seung-yun Yang: Pathological prosody: overview, assessment, and treatment
Part VI: Prosody and Language Processing
35: Joseph C.Y. Lau, Zilong Xie, Bharath Chandrasekaran, and Patrick C.M. Wong: Cortical and subcortical processing of linguistic pitch patterns
36: James M. McQueen and Laura C. Dilley: Prosody and spoken-word recognition
37: Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel: The role of phrase-level prosody in speech production planning
Part VII: Prosody and Language Acquisition
38: Paula Fikkert, Liquan Liu, and Mitsuhiko Ota: The acquisition of word prosody
39: Aoju Chen, Nuria Esteve-Gibert, Pilar Prieto, and Melissa A. Redford: Development in phrase-level prosody from infancy to late childhood
40: Judit Gervain, Anne Christophe, and Reiko Mazuka: Prosodic bootstrapping
41: Melanie Soderstrom and Heather Bortfeld: Prosody in infant- and child-directed speech
42: Rhea Paul, Elizabeth Schoen Simmons, and James Mahshie: Prosody in children with atypical development
43: Allard Jongman and Annie Tremblay: Word prosody in L2
44: Juergen Trouvain and Bettina Braun: Sentence prosody in a second language
45: Dorothy M. Chun and John M. Levis: Prosody in L2 teaching: methodologies and effectiveness
Part VIII Prosody in Technology and the Arts
46: Anton Batliner and Bernd Moebius: Prosody in automatic speech processing
47: Andrew Rosenberg and Mark Hasegawa-Johnson: Automatic prosody labeling and assessment
48: Paul Kiparsky: Stress, meter, and text-setting
49: D. Robert Ladd and James Kirby: Tone-melody matching in tone language singing
References
Index of languages
Index of subjects
Part I: Fundamentals of Language Prosody
2: Taehong Cho and Doris Muecke: Articulatory measures of prosody
3: Oliver Niebuhr, Henning Reetz, Jonathan Barnes, and Alan C.L. Yu: Fundamental aspects in the perception of f0
Part II: Prosody and Linguistic Structure
4: Larry M. Hyman and William R. Leben: Tone systems
5: Matthew K. Gordon and Harry van der Hulst: Word-stress systems
6: Amalia Arvaniti and Janet Fletcher: The Autosegmental-Metrical theory of intonation phonology
7: John J. McCarthy: Prosodic morphology
8: Wendy Sandler, Diane Lillo-Martin, Svetlana Dachkovsky, and Ronice Mueller de Quadros: Sign language prosody
Part III: Prosody in Speech Production
9: Jonathan Barnes, Hansjoerg Mixdorff, and Oliver Niebuhr: Phonetic variation in tone and intonation systems
10: Vincent J. van Heuven and Alice Turk: Phonetic correlates of word and sentence stress
11: Laurence White and Zofia Malisz: Speech rhythm and timing
Part IV: Prosody across the World
12: Larry M. Hyman, Hannah Sande, Florian Lionnet, Nicholas Rolle, and Emily Clem: Sub-Saharan Africa
13: Sam Hellmuth and Mary Pearce: North Africa and the Middle East
14: Anastasia Karlsson, Gueliz Guenes, Hamed Rahmani, and Sun-Ah Jun: South West and Central Asia
15: Maciej Karpinski, Bistra Andreeva, Eva Liina Asu, Anna Daugavet, Stefan Benus, and Katalin Mady: Central and Eastern Europe
16: Mariapaola D'Imperio, Barbara Gili Fivela, Mary Baltazani, Brechtje Post, and Alexandra Vella: Southern Europe
17: Sonia Frota, Pilar Prieto, and Gorka Elordieta: Iberia
18: Tomas Riad and Joerg Peters: Northwestern Europe
19: Martine Grice, James Sneed German, and Paul Warren: Varieties of English
20: Kristjan Arnason, Anja Arnhold, Ailbhe Ni Chasaide, Nicole Dehe, Amelie Dorn, and Osahito Miyaoka: The North Atlantic and the Arctic
21: Aditi Lahiri and Holly J. Kennard: The Indian Subcontinent
22: Jie Zhang, San Duanmu, and Yiya Chen: China and Siberia
23: Marc Brunelle, James Kirby, Alexis Michaud, and Justin Watkins: Mainland Southeast Asia
24: Sun-Ah Jun and Haruo Kubozono: Asian Pacific Rim
25: Nikolaus P. Himmelmann and Daniel Kaufman: Austronesia
26: Brett Baker, Janet Fletcher, and Mark Donohue: Australia and New Guinea
27: Gabriela Caballero and Matthew K. Gordon: North America
28: Christian DiCanio and Ryan Bennett: Mesoamerica
29: Thiago Costa Chacon and Fernando O. de Carvalho: South America
Part V: Prosody in Communication
30: Matthijs Westera, Daniel Goodhue, and Carlos Gussenhoven: Meanings of tones and tunes
31: Frank Kuegler and Sasha Calhoun: Prosodic encoding of information structure: A typological perspective
32: Julia Hirschberg, Stefan Benus, Agustin Gravano, and Rivka Levitan: Prosody in discourse and speaker state
33: Marc Swerts and Emiel Krahmer: Visual prosody across cultures
34: Diana Van Lancker Sidtis and Seung-yun Yang: Pathological prosody: overview, assessment, and treatment
Part VI: Prosody and Language Processing
35: Joseph C.Y. Lau, Zilong Xie, Bharath Chandrasekaran, and Patrick C.M. Wong: Cortical and subcortical processing of linguistic pitch patterns
36: James M. McQueen and Laura C. Dilley: Prosody and spoken-word recognition
37: Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel: The role of phrase-level prosody in speech production planning
Part VII: Prosody and Language Acquisition
38: Paula Fikkert, Liquan Liu, and Mitsuhiko Ota: The acquisition of word prosody
39: Aoju Chen, Nuria Esteve-Gibert, Pilar Prieto, and Melissa A. Redford: Development in phrase-level prosody from infancy to late childhood
40: Judit Gervain, Anne Christophe, and Reiko Mazuka: Prosodic bootstrapping
41: Melanie Soderstrom and Heather Bortfeld: Prosody in infant- and child-directed speech
42: Rhea Paul, Elizabeth Schoen Simmons, and James Mahshie: Prosody in children with atypical development
43: Allard Jongman and Annie Tremblay: Word prosody in L2
44: Juergen Trouvain and Bettina Braun: Sentence prosody in a second language
45: Dorothy M. Chun and John M. Levis: Prosody in L2 teaching: methodologies and effectiveness
Part VIII Prosody in Technology and the Arts
46: Anton Batliner and Bernd Moebius: Prosody in automatic speech processing
47: Andrew Rosenberg and Mark Hasegawa-Johnson: Automatic prosody labeling and assessment
48: Paul Kiparsky: Stress, meter, and text-setting
49: D. Robert Ladd and James Kirby: Tone-melody matching in tone language singing
References
Index of languages
Index of subjects
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.