Complete list of the articles (in order of assignment) &links.

 

Jenkins, J. J. (1987). A selective history of issues in vowel perception. Journal of Memory & Language, 26(5), 542-549.

Lisker, L. & Abramson, A.S. (1964). A cross-language study of voicing in initial stops: Acoustical measurements. Word, 20(3), 384-422.

Miller, J. L. (1990). Speech perception. In D. N. Osherson & H. Lasnik (Eds.), An invitation to cognitive science: Language. Vol. 1. Cambridge: MIT Press. pgs. 69-93.

Eimas, P. D. & Corbit, J. D. (1973). Selective adaptation of linguistic feature detectors. Cognitive Psychology, 4, 99-109.

Kuhl, P. K. & Miller, J. D. (1975). Speech perception by the chinchilla: Voiced-voiceless distinction in alveolar plosive consonants. Science, 190 (4209), 69-72.

Rosen, S. & Howell, P. (1987). Auditory, articulatory, and learning explanations of categorical perception in speech. In S. Harnad (Ed.), Categorical perception: The groundwork of cognition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (p. 113-160; but only read pages 113-124.)

Strange, W. (1987). Information for vowels in formant transitions. Journal of Memory & Language, 26(5), 550-557.


Kluender, K. R, Diehl, R. L., & Killeen, P. R. (1987). Japanese quail can learn phonetic categories. Science, 237, 1195-1197.

Remez, R. E., Rubin, P. E., Pisoni, D. B., & Carrell T. D. (1981). Speech perception without traditional speech cues. Science, 212, 947-950.

Shannon, R. V., Zeng, F.-G., Kamath, V., Wygonski, J., & Ekelid, M. (1995). Speech recognition with primarily temporal cues. Science, 270, 303-304.

Byrd, D. (1992). Preliminary results on speaker-dependent variation in the TIMIT database. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 92 (1), 593-596.

Pisoni, D. B. (1990). Effects of talker variability on speech perception: Implications for current research and theory. ICSLP 90 Proceedings, Kobe, Japan.

Miller, J.L. & Liberman, A. M. (1979). Some effects of later-occurring information on the perception of stop consonant and semivowel. Perception & Psychophysics, 25, 457-465.

McGurk, H., & McDonald, J. (1976). Hearing lips and seeing voices. Nature, 264, 746-748.

Holt, L. L. (2006). Speech categorization in context: joint effects of non-speech and speech precursors. Journal of the Acoustical Society of
America, 119, 4016-4026.

Gow, D. W. & McMurray, B. (in press) Word recognition and phonology: The case of English coronal place assimilation. Papers in Laboratory Phonology 9.

Eimas, P. D., Siqueland, E. R., Jusczyk, P. & Vigorito, J. (1971). Speech perception in infants. Science, 171, 303-306.

Miyawaki, K., Strange, W., Verbrugge, R., Liberman, A. M. & Jenkins, J. J. (1975). An effect of linguistic experience: The discrimination of [r] and [l] by native speakers of Japanese and English. Perception & Psychophysics, 18(5), 331-340.

Werker, J. F. & Tees, R. C. (1984). Cross-language speech perception: Evidence for perceptual reorganization during the first year of life. Infant Behavior & Development, 7, 49-63.

Maye, J., Werker, J. F., & Gerken, L.A. (2002). Infant sensitivity to distributional information can affect phonetic discrimination. Cognition,
82, B101-B111.