Phonetics, Phonology, and Cognition explores the cognitive and biological systems involved in speech. It offers challenging findings on the cognitive status of phonological representations and their relationship with phonetic implementations. The book's authors are leading researchers from linguistics and cognitive science. They consider, for example, the type of control required for the implementation of articulatory events and the nature of the loop between auditory and articulatory mechanisms. They show the advances that have already been made on these and other central issues in psycho- and neuro-linguistics now that the operations of the brain can be studied directly and neuroscience is no longer dependent on post-mortem dissection of speech-impaired patients. In its exploration of the mental and physical representation of sound systems, Phonology, Phonetics and Cognition demonstrates the value of phonology in allowing the integration of phonetics and cognition. Its authors are concerned with both the realization of representations in physical structures and the way that linguistic sound structure is linked to language form and mental coding. In sum, this book provides a revealing cross-disciplinary perspective on language, speech, and cognition which will be of value and interest to linguists, cognitive scientists, and speech pathologists.
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Presents a cross-disciplinary perspective on language, speech, and cognition. Written by American and European specialists, this book explores the cognitive and biological systems involved in speech, and offers findings on the cognitive status of phonological representations and their relationship with phonetic implementations.
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Introduction ; 1. Phonology, Phonetics, and Cognition ; 2. What Are Phonological Syllables Made Of? The Voice/Length Symmetry ; 3. Tone in Mituku: How a Floating Tone Nailed Down an Intermediate Level ; 4. Phonetic Representations in the Mental Lexicon ; 5. Phonological Primes: Cues and Acoustic Signatures ; 6. The Role of the Syllable in Speech Perception and Production ; 7. Fossil Markers of Language Development: Phonological 'Deafnesses' in Adult Speech Processing ; 8. Syllabic Constraints and Constraint Conflicts in Loanword Adaptations, Aphasic Speech, and Children's Errors ; 9. What Can the Utterance 'Tan, Tan' of Broca's Patient Leborgne Tell Us about the Hypothesis of an Emergent 'Babble-Syllable' Downloaded by SMA? ; 10. Towards Imaging the Neural Correlates of Language Functions ; 11. Phonology in a Theory of Perception-for-Action-Control
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A revealing cross-disciplinary perspective on language, speech, and cognition Chapters written by specialists in fields ranging from phonetics to neurology Of value and interest to linguists, cognitive scientists, and speech pathologists
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Jacques Durand is Professor of Linguistics in the English Department of the University of Toulouse-Le Mirail and a member there of the CNRS team: Equipe de Recherche en Syntaxe et Sémantique, where he leads a phonology team. He is the author and editor of a number of books on phonology, including Generative and Non-Linear Phonology (1990), Frontiers of Phonology (1995, with F. Katamba) and Current Trends in Phonology (1996, with B. Laks).; Bernard Laks is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Paris X and the Director there of the CNRS team Modèles, Dynamiques, Corpus. He is the author of Langage et cognition (1996) and Phonologie accentuelle (1997). He has edited a number of books on phonology, including Current Trends in Phonology (1996, with J. Durand). His recent work has been in the area of language from a connectionist perspective.
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A revealing cross-disciplinary perspective on language, speech, and cognition Chapters written by specialists in fields ranging from phonetics to neurology Of value and interest to linguists, cognitive scientists, and speech pathologists
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Product details

ISBN
9780198299844
Published
2002
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Weight
507 gr
Height
234 mm
Width
157 mm
Thickness
20 mm
Age
P, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
352

Biographical note

Jacques Durand is Professor of Linguistics in the English Department of the University of Toulouse-Le Mirail and a member there of the CNRS team: Equipe de Recherche en Syntaxe et Sémantique, where he leads a phonology team. He is the author and editor of a number of books on phonology, including Generative and Non-Linear Phonology (1990), Frontiers of Phonology (1995, with F. Katamba) and Current Trends in Phonology (1996, with B. Laks).; Bernard Laks is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Paris X and the Director there of the CNRS team Modèles, Dynamiques, Corpus. He is the author of Langage et cognition (1996) and Phonologie accentuelle (1997). He has edited a number of books on phonology, including Current Trends in Phonology (1996, with J. Durand). His recent work has been in the area of language from a connectionist perspective.