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Book cover for Prosodic Theory and Practice

Prosodic Theory and PracticeOpen Access

Edited by
Jonathan Barnes,
Jonathan Barnes

Jonathan Barnes is Associate Professor of Linguistics at Boston University.

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Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel
Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel

Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel is Principal Research Scientist in the Speech Communication Group at MIT's Research Laboratory of Electronics.

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The MIT Press
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/10413.001.0001
ISBN electronic:
9780262543194
In Special Collection: CogNet
Publication date:
2022

Contents

  1. Title Page
  2. Copyright
  3. Table of Contents
  4. Preface and Acknowledgments
  5. Introduction: What Are Theories of Prosody For?
  6. 1. The Autosegmental-Metrical Model of Intonational Phonology
    1. Commentary on Chapter 1: Introducing Flexibility into Autosegmental-Metrical Phonology
    2. Author Response to the Commentary: Prosodic Typology and the Handling of Variability in Intonation
  7. 2. Modeling Danish Intonation
  8. 3. A Multilevel, Multilingual Approach to the Annotation and Representation of Speech Prosody
  9. 4. The ToBI Transcription System: Conventions, Strengths, and Challenges
    1. Commentary on Chapter 4: An Enhanced Autosegmental-Metrical Theory (AM+) Facilitates Phonetically Transparent Prosodic Annotation
    2. Author Response to the Commentary: ToBI Is Not Designed to Be Phonetically Transparent
  10. 5. Prosody in Articulatory Phonology
    1. Commentary on Chapter 5: Time to Consider Nonoscillatory, Phonology-Extrinsic Timing Approaches to Prosody in Speech Motor Control
  11. 6. The Trouble with ToBI
  12. 7. The Prosogram Model for Pitch Stylization and Its Applications in Intonation Transcription
  13. 8. The Kiel Intonation Model—KIM
  14. 9. The Rise and Fall of the British School of Intonation Analysis
  15. 10. The PaIntE Model of Intonation
  16. 11. The PENTA Model: Concepts, Use, and Implications
    1. Commentary on Chapter 11: Comparing the PENTA Model to Autosegmental-Metrical Phonology
    2. Author Response to the Commentary: Multiple Layers of Meanings Can Be Linked to Surface Prosody without Direct Mapping
  17. Index
html-cover-page title_page copyright contents preface introduction chapter_1 chapter_2 chapter_3 chapter_4 chapter_5 chapter_6 chapter_7 chapter_8 chapter_9 chapter_10 chapter_11 index