Special Pre-Conference Lecture

 

     Invited Speaker:

   Pat Keating

     UCLA Distinguished Professor, Emerita

     Phonation across languages

 


Session 1: LabPhon for words, exploring the role of phonetic detail in lexical processing and its implications for the relationship between LabPhon and the lexicon

 

     Invited Speaker:

   Holger Mitterer

     University of Malta (Malta)

     Adventures in /ʔ/


     Invited Discussant:

   Jongho Jun

     Seoul National University (South Korea)

 


Session 2: LabPhon for sentences, exploring the role of phonetic detail in sentence processing and its implications for the relationship between LabPhon and syntax

 

     Invited speaker:

   Fernanda Ferreira

     University of California, Davis (USA)

     Prosody, Syntax, and Conversational Language


     Invited Discussant:

   Michael Wagner

     McGill University (Canada)

 


Session 3: LabPhon for pragmatics and discourse, exploring the role of phonetic detail in conveying pragmatic meanings in discourse and its implications for the relationship between LabPhon and information/discourse structure

 

     Invited speaker:

   Sasha Calhoun

     Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand)

     Revisiting how contrast and prominence link: A laboratory phonologist’s view


     Invited Discussant:

   Aoju Chen

     Utrecht University (the Netherlands)

 


Session 4: LabPhon for social contexts, exploring the role of phonetic detail in carrying social information and its implications for the relationship between LabPhon and sociophonetics

 

     Invited speaker:

   Abby Walker

     Virginia Tech (USA)

     Out of context: When social context increases uncertainty


     Invited Discussant:

   Tessa Bent

     Indiana University (USA)

 


Session 5: LabPhon for non-articulatory gestures in spoken language, exploring the role of non-articulatory (facial and manual) gestures in spoken language in relation to LabPhon

 

     Invited speaker:

   Marc Swerts

     Tilburg University (the Netherlands)

     Keeping gestures in sync


     Invited Discussant:

   Jelena Krivokapić

     University of Michigan (USA)

 


Detailed Program

Accepted Papers

Author Guidance

Satellite Workshops

 

 


Conference