Search
Skip to Search Results- 10GAPSSHRC
- 5Tucker, Benjamin V.
- 3Benjamin V. Tucker
- 3Pelletier, Francis J.
- 2Arnhold, Anja
- 2Beck, David
- 20Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of
- 20Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of/Theses and Dissertations
- 17Toolkit for Grant Success
- 17Toolkit for Grant Success/Successful Grants (Toolkit for Grant Success)
- 12Linguistics, Department of
- 8Linguistics, Department of/Research Publications (Linguistics)
- 21Research Material
- 20Thesis
- 7Conference/Workshop Poster
- 6Article (Published)
- 4Conference/Workshop Presentation
- 4Report
-
2015
Pollock, Karen, Tucker, Benjamin V., Mills, Timothy
Phonetics is an inherently lab-oriented topic, involving the investigation and analysis of speech data; but it is often taught in large sections with limited instructional time and other resources, so instructors are unable to engage in the deep interactive explorations of topics that would be...
-
Spring 2010
While much research has been dedicated to studying the speech of French immersion students, relatively little is known about their sociolinguistic competence, particularly in the area of phonetics. This study aims to determine the extent to which a group of French immersion students in Ontario,...
-
2012
Pelletier, Francis J., Lepore, Ernest
This paper is an investigation into the role of linguistics in philosophical theorizing. In particular, we will show how linguistic evidence can be adduced in support of an event approach to action verbs and their adverbial modifiers: if we increase the adicity of verbs, if we allow there to be...
-
Modelling phonetic reduction in a corpus of spoken English using Random Forests and Mixed-Effects Regression
DownloadFall 2013
In this thesis, phonetic reduction in the Buckeye Corpus (Pitt et al. 2005) of conversational speech is modelled using advanced statistical techniques. Two measures of phonetic reduction are modelled, reduction in the duration of words and deletion of segments from words. Statistical modelling...
-
Spring 2010
Investigations of morphological impairment in aphasia have revealed that patients may retain knowledge of a word’s morphological status even when they cannot access that word (Delazer & Semenza, 1998). In addition, aphasiological investigations have shown that more errors are produced with...
-
1977
It is an extremely popular view among logicians and some linguists (McCawley, Hurford) that there are two distinct or's in English - an \"inclusive\" and an \"exclusive\". It seems equally popular among lexicographers, experts on proper usage, and some linguists (R. Lakoff) that there is only...
-
Fall 2023
This dissertation is a series of studies that explore the acoustic production of stress, length, non-stress metrical phonology, and other syllable structure altering phenomena in Central Alaskan Yup’ik and Chugach Alutiiq. The intricate systems of weight, length, and stress that conspire to...
-
Fall 2023
Previous research indicates that knowledge about sociocultural norms affects language processing immediately and automatically. One such example is the Stereotype Effect, where sentences containing violations of gender stereotypes take longer to read and are rated as less appropriate than...