Warehouse Stock Clearance Sale

Grab a bargain today!


The Handbook of Speech Perception
By

Rating

Product Description
Product Details

Table of Contents

List of Contributors.
Preface: Michael Studdert-Kennedy (Haskins Laboratories).


Introduction: David B. Pisoni (Indiana University) and Robert E.
Remez (Barnard College).


Part I: Sensing Speech.


1. Acoustic Analysis and Synthesis of Speech: James R. Sawusch
(University at Buffalo).


2. Perceptual Organization of Speech: Robert E. Remez (Barnard
College).


3. Primacy of Multimodal Speech Perception: Lawrence D.
Rosenblum (University of California, Riverside).


4. Phonetic Processing by the Speech Perceiving Brain: Lynne E.
Bernstein (House Ear Institute).


5. Event-related Evoked Potentials (ERPs) in Speech Perception:
Dennis Molfese, Alexandra P. Fonaryova Key, Mandy J. Maguire, Guy
O. Dove and Victoria J. Molfese (all University of Louisville).


Part II: Perception of Linguistic Properties.


6. Features in Speech Perception and Lexical Access: Kenneth N.
Stevens (Massachusetts Institute of Technology).


7. Speech Perception and Phonological Contrast: Edward Flemming
(Stanford University).


8. Acoustic Cues to the Perception of Segmental Phonemes:
Lawrence J. Raphael (Adelphi University).


9. Clear Speech: Rosalie M. Uchanski (CID at Washington
University School of Medicine).


10. Perception of Intonation: Jacqueline Vaissiere (Laboratoire
de Phonetique et de Phonologique, Paris).


11. Lexical Stress: Anne C. Cutler (Max Planck Institute for
Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, The Netherlands).


12. Slips of the Ear: Z. S. Bond (Ohio University).


Part III: Perception of Indexical Properties.


13. Perception of Dialect Variation: Cynthia Clopper and David
B. Pisoni (both Indiana University).


14. Perception of Voice Quality: Jody Kreiman (UCLA), Diana
Vanlancker-Sidtis (New York University) and Bruce R. Gerratt
(UCLA).


15. Speaker Normalization in Speech Perception: Keith A. Johnson
(Ohio State University).


16. Perceptual Integration of Linguistic and Non-Linguistic
Properties of Speech: Lynne C. Nygaard (Emory University).


Part IV: Speech Perception by Special Listeners.


17. Speech Perception in Infants: Derek M. Houston (Indiana
University School of Medicine).


18. Speech Perception in Childhood: Amanda C. Walley (University
of Alabama, Birmingham).


19. Age-related Changes in Spoken Word Recognition: Mitchell S.
Sommers (Washington University).


20. Speech Perception in Deaf Children with Cochlear Implants:
David B. Pisoni (Indiana University).


21. Speech Perception following Focal Brain Injury: William
Badacker (Johns Hopkins University).


22. Cross-Language Speech Perception: Nuria Sebastian-Galles
(Parc Cientific de Barcelona ? Hospital de San Joan de
Déu).


23. Speech Perception in Specific Language Impairment: Susan
Ellis Weismer (University of Wisconsin, Madison).


Part V: Recognition of Spoken Words.


24. Spoken Word Recognition: The Challenge of Variation: Paul A.
Luce and Conor T. McLennan (State University of New York,
Buffalo).


25. Probabilistic Phonotactics in Spoken Word Recognition:
Edward T. Auer, Jr. (House Ear Institute) and Paul A. Luce (State
University of New York, Buffalo).


Part VI: Theoretical Perspectives.


26. The Relation of Speech Perception and Speech Production:
Carol A. Fowler and Bruno Galantucci (both Haskins
Laboratories).


27. A Neuroethological Perspective on the Perception of Vocal
Communication Signals: Timothy Gentner (University of Chicago) and
Gregory F. Ball (Johns Hopkins University).


Index

About the Author

David B. Pisoni is Chancellor?s Professor of
Psychology and Cognitive Science and Adjunct Professor of
Linguistics at Indiana University in Bloomington. He is also an
Adjunct Professor of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery at the
Indiana University School of Medicine. He has published numerous
articles on topics such as speech synthesis, speech perception and
spoken word recognition, and acoustic phonetics in a wide variety
of scientific journals including Science, Journal of the
Acoustical Society of America, Ear and Hearing, and Speech
Communication.






Robert E. Remez is Ann Whitney Olin Professor of
Psychology at Barnard College, Columbia University. His research on
the perception and production of speech has focused on perceptual
organization and the identification of individual talkers. His
research reports have appeared in a variety of scientific journals
including Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception
and Performance, Perception & Psychophysics,
Psychological Review, Psychological Science, and
Science.

Reviews

?The Handbook includes a rich and comprehensive set of
papers providing a state-of-the-art view of current research on
speech perception. David Pisoni and Robert Remez have done a
remarkable job in pulling together this broad and important range
of topics contributed by many of the leading researchers in the
field. The chapters are well-written, interesting, and provocative.
Taken together, The Handbook of Speech Perception provides
an exciting, stimulating, and informative set of readings that is a
must-read for anyone interested in learning about this important
field of research.?

Sheila E. Blumstein, Brown University

?This is a most welcome book. For the expert who is well
aware of the complexity of the issues and methods in speech
perception, this handbook is a godsend for its thoroughness. It
covers the field from a to z including, most notably, extended
examination of the challenges that speech variability presents to
the listener and that special listeners face. For the student or
researcher from outside the field, the handbook is a lively
introduction to the extraordinary progress that the study of speech
perception has enjoyed over the last few decades.?

Gary Dell, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign




?This real treasury marks the maturity of the field of
speech perception, making the whole body of work widely available
in one volume as never before. The core of experimental studies in
young adults that defined the field 30 years ago was based in
phonology, acoustic phonetics, perception psychology, and
physiology. The editors are to be congratulated on updating these
roots, while reflecting the kaleidoscopic extension into studies
with infants, the elderly, and distinct patient groups, and
consolidating the link to neuroscience.?

Mark Haggard, MRC, Cambridge, UK




?This is a necessary volume. At a time when advances in
our understanding of speech perception are as likely to come from
functional imaging techniques, Optimality Theory, or the study of
speech perception mediated by cochlear implants, researchers need a
single volume that captures the state of inquiry across the
spectrum of speech research. Pisoni and Remez have assembled a
wonderful resource.?

David W. Gow, Jr., The Massachusetts General Hospital




?With the addition of this volume to the Blackwell series
of handbooks in linguistics, the study of speech perception takes
its rightful place as an independent and mature subdiscipline of
linguistics. Covering a wide range of topics, from the encoding and
neural representation of speech to the recognition of linguistic
and paralinguistic properties by a variety of listener populations,
this volume both surveys the current landscape of speech perception
research and sets an agenda for the future development of the
field.?

Ann Bradlow, Northwestern University




"A detailed collection of forward-thinking seminal
articles...enables both the student and researcher to understand
the most complicated aspects of the subject... If you have to
purchase just one core text on speech perception- definitely buy
this! ... an exciting, stimulating and informative collection of
readings available as a single volume that is excellent value for
money. The editors have assembled a wonderful resource."

Reference Reviews

Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
This title is unavailable for purchase as none of our regular suppliers have stock available. If you are the publisher, author or distributor for this item, please visit this link.

Back to top