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Original Articles

The use of prosody in highlighting alterations in repairs from unrestricted speech

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Pages 733-758 | Received 31 Dec 1990, Published online: 29 May 2007

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Read on this site (2)

Martin Corley. (2010) Making predictions from speech with repairs: Evidence from eye movements. Language and Cognitive Processes 25:5, pages 706-727.
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EllenF. Lau & Fernanda Ferreira. (2005) Lingering effects of disfluent material on comprehension of garden path sentences. Language and Cognitive Processes 20:5, pages 633-666.
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Articles from other publishers (14)

Leendert Plug & Paul Carter. (2014) Timing and tempo in spontaneous phonological error repair. Journal of Phonetics 45, pages 52-63.
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Gabriel Skantze & Anna Hjalmarsson. (2013) Towards incremental speech generation in conversational systems. Computer Speech & Language 27:1, pages 243-262.
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Martin Corley & Robert J. Hartsuiker. (2011) Why Um Helps Auditory Word Recognition: The Temporal Delay Hypothesis. PLoS ONE 6:5, pages e19792.
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Martin Corley & Oliver W. Stewart. (2008) Hesitation Disfluencies in Spontaneous Speech: The Meaning of um . Language and Linguistics Compass 2:4, pages 589-602.
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Fernanda Ferreira, Ellen F. Lau & Karl G.D. Bailey. (2010) Disfluencies, language comprehension, and Tree Adjoining Grammars. Cognitive Science 28:5, pages 721-749.
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Susan E. Brennan & Michael F. Schober. (2001) How Listeners Compensate for Disfluencies in Spontaneous Speech. Journal of Memory and Language 44:2, pages 274-296.
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Albert Postma. (2000) Detection of errors during speech production: a review of speech monitoring models. Cognition 77:2, pages 97-132.
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Peter Howell, Alison Staveley, Stevie Sackin & Lena Rustin. (1998) Methods of interval selection, presence of noise and their effects on detectability of repetitions and prolongations. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 104:6, pages 3558-3567.
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Sharon Oviatt, Gina-Anne Levow, Elliott Moreton & Margaret MacEachern. (1998) Modeling global and focal hyperarticulation during human–computer error resolution. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 104:5, pages 3080-3098.
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R. J. Lickley & E. G. Bard. (2016) When Can Listeners Detect Disfluency in Spontaneous Speech?. Language and Speech 41:2, pages 203-226.
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Peter Howell, James Au-Yeung, Stevie Sackin, Kazan Glenn & Lena Rustin. (1997) Detection of supralexical dysfluencies in a text read by children who stutter. Journal of Fluency Disorders 22:4, pages 299-307.
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Peter Howell, Stevie Sackin & Kazan Glenn. (1997) Development of a Two-Stage Procedure for the Automatic Recognition of Dysfluencies in the Speech of Children Who Stutter. Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research 40:5, pages 1085.
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Peter Howell, Stevie Sackin & Kazan Glenn. (1997) Development of a Two-Stage Procedure for the Automatic Recognition of Dysfluencies in the Speech of Children Who Stutter. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research 40:5, pages 1073-1084.
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I. Leudar, P. Thomas & M. Johnston. (2009) Self-monitoring in speech production: effects of verbal hallucinations and negative symptoms. Psychological Medicine 24:3, pages 749-761.
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