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ExLing 2008: Athens, Greece
- Antonis Botinis:

ISCA Tutorial and Research Workshop on Experimental Linguistics, ExLing 2008, Athens, Greece, August 25-27, 2008. ISCA 2008 - Nuray Alagözlü:

Discourse markers and L2 listening: do computers make a difference in L2 listening comprehension? 1-4 - Christina Alexandris:

Word category and prosodic emphasis in dialog modules of speech technology applications. 5-8 - Mansour M. Alghamdi, Fayez A. Alhargan, Mohamed I. Alkanhal, Ashraf Alkhairy, Munir Eldesouki, Ammar Alenazi:

Saudi accented Arabic voice bank. 9-12 - Eiman Tamah Al-Shammari, Jessica Lin:

A new Arabic stemming algorithm. 13-16 - Georgia Andreou, Ioannis Galantomos:

Neurolinguistic aspects of metaphor theory. 17-20 - Volha Anufryk, Matthias Jilka, Grzegorz Dogil:

Prosodic variation in L2: a case of Germans speaking English. 21-24 - Denis Arnold, Petra Wagner:

The influence of top-down expectations on the perception of syllable prominence. 25-28 - Anja Arts, Alfons Maes, Leo G. M. Noordman, Carel Jansen:

Overspecification in action-oriented discourse: task importance affects the production of overspecifications and overspecifications increase identification efficiency in perception. 29-32 - Petra Augurzky:

Prosodic phrasing in German sentence production: optimal length vs. argument structure. 33-36 - Henrike Baumotte, Grzegorz Dogil:

Coarticulation in non-native speakers of English: /.lv/-sequences in non-proficient vs. proficient learners. 37-40 - Antonis Botinis, Marios Fourakis, Olga Nikolaenkova:

Rhythm and stress intervals in Greek and Russian. 41-44 - Victor J. Boucher, Annie C. Gilbert:

Investigations of speech segmentation: addressing the writing bias in language research. 45-48 - Rebeka Campos-Astorkiza:

Two sources of voicing neutralization in Lithuanian. 49-52 - Maria Cantoni:

Stress assignment in Brazilian Portuguese: a usage-based approach. 53-56 - Luciana Castro, João Antônio de Moraes:

The temporal structure of professional speaking styles in Brazilian Portuguese. 57-60 - Anthi Chaida:

Prosodic perception of sentence types in Greek. 61-64 - Amina Chentir, Mhania Guerti, Daniel J. Hirst:

Classification by discriminant analysis of the energy in view of the detection of accentuated syllable in standard Arabic. 65-68 - Man-ni Chu, Carlos Gussenhoven, Roeland van Hout:

The identification of the place of articulation in coda stops as a function of the preceding vowel: a cross-linguistic study. 69-72 - Deolinda Correia, Isabel Hub Faria, Paula Luegi:

Reading mathematical exercises: preliminary results. 73-76 - Hanny den Ouden, Carel van Wijk:

Prosody in read aloud text: relation with information status, content type and boundary strength. 77-80 - Isabel Falé:

Imperatives in European Portuguese: a perception approach. 81-84 - Isabel Falé, Isabel Hub Faria:

Nasometric values for European Portuguese: preliminary results. 85-88 - Isabel Hub Faria, Paula Luegi:

Priming effect on word reading and recall. 89-92 - María Fernández-Parra:

Formulaic expressions in language technology. 93-96 - Rosa Giordano:

Continuation tunes in two central varieties of Italian: phonetic patterns and phonological issues. 97-100 - Chatchawarn Hansakunbuntheung, Hiroaki Kato, Yoshinori Sagisaka:

Model-based duration analysis on English natives and Thai learners. 101-104 - Paul Hemeren, Sofia Kasviki, Barbara Gawronska:

Lexicalization of natural actions and cross-linguistic stability. 105-108 - Begoña Herrero:

"deep and raspy" or "high and squeaky": a cross-linguistic study of voice perception and voice labeling. 109-112 - Stefanie Jannedy:

The effect of focus on lexical tones in Vietnamese. 113-116 - Constandinos Kalimeris, Stelios Bakamidis:

MORPHEMIA: a semi-supervised algorithm for the segmentation of modern Greek words into morphemes. 117-120 - Naoko Kinoshita:

The acquisition of temporal categorical perception by Japanese second language learners. 121-124 - Tanja Kocjancic:

Tongue movements and syllable onset complexity: ultrasound study. 125-128 - Mari Lehtinen:

The prosodic and nonverbal deficiencies of French- and Finnish-speaking persons with Asperger syndrome. 129-132 - Angelos Lengeris:

The effectiveness of auditory phonetic training on Greek native speakers2 perception and production of southern British English vowels. 133-136 - Natalie Lewandowski, Travis Wade, Grzegorz Dogil:

Phonetic convergence and language talent within native-nonnative interactions. 137-140 - Hsiu-Tan Liu, Chin-Hsing Tseng, Chun-Jung Liu:

A comparison of Taiwanese sign language and manually coded Chinese: word length and short-term memory capacity. 141-144 - Sofia Loui, Silvia P. Gennari:

The role of animacy in the production of greek relative clauses. 145-148 - Anastassia Loukina:

Acoustic model of stress in standard Greek and Greek dialects. 149-152 - Zahra Mahmoodzade, Mahmood Bijankhan:

Using F2 transition parameters in distinguishing Persian affricates from homorganic consonants. 153-156 - Philippe Martin:

Intonation of parentheses in spontaneous French sentences. 157-160 - Hinako Masuda, Takayuki Arai:

Perception of consonant clusters in Japanese native speakers: influence of foreign language learning. 161-164 - Holger Mitterer:

How are words reduced in spontaneous speech? 165-168 - Jose A. Mompeán:

Phonological free variation in English: an empirical study. 169-172 - Sylvia Moosmüller:

Interaction of phonetics, phonology, and sociophonology - illustrated by the vowels of standard Austrian German. 173-176 - Siham Ouamour-Sayoud, Mhania Guerti, Halim Sayoud:

PENS: a confidence parameter estimating the number of speakers. 177-180 - Ioannis Paraskevas, Maria Rangoussi:

Phoneme classification using the Hartley phase spectrum. 181-184 - Barbara Pastuszek-Lipiñska:

The influence of music education and training on SLA. 185-188 - Michela Russo:

Rhythmic analysis and quantitative measures: the essence of rhythm as temporal patterning. 189-192 - Vahid Sadeghi:

Compensatory lengthening in Persian: the timing of non-modal phonation. 193-196 - Ben Serridge, Luciana Castro:

Faster time-aligned phonetic transcriptions through partial automation. 197-200 - Chris Sheppard:

The effects of the acoustic properties of second language vowel production on pronunciation evaluation. 201-204 - Thaïs Cristófaro Silva, Christina Abreu Gomes:

Frequency effects in language acquisition: a case study of plural forms in Brazilian Portuguese. 205-208 - Mee Sonu:

Factors influencing perceptual attainment of Japanese geminate consonants by Korean learners of Japanese. 209-212 - Yuichi Todaka:

Receptive and productive skills of English /l/ and /r/ by Japanese college students in relation to their motivation. 213-216 - Hajime Tsubaki, Keiji Yasuda, Hirofumi Yamamoto, Yoshinori Sagisaka:

Objective evaluation of second language learner2s translation proficiency using statistical translation measures. 217-220 - Agnieszka Wagner:

Automatic labeling of prosody. 221-224 - Andrea Weber, Alissa Melinger:

Name dominance in spoken word recognition is (not) modulated by expectations: evidence from synonyms. 225-228 - Melanie Weirich:

Vocal stereotypes. 229-232 - Charlotte Wollermann, Bernhard Schröder:

Does uncertainty effect the case of exhaustive interpretation? 233-236 - Magdalena Wrembel, Karolina Rataj:

"sounds like a rainbow" - sound-colour mappings in vowel perception. 237-240 - Charalabos Themistocleous:

Focus effects on syllable duration in Cypriot Greek. 241-244

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