2014
Effects of speaking mode (clear, habitual, slow speech) on vowels of individuals with Parkinson's disease
Buccheri R, Whalen D, Strange W, McGarr N, Raphael L. Effects of speaking mode (clear, habitual, slow speech) on vowels of individuals with Parkinson's disease. The Journal Of The Acoustical Society Of America 2014, 135: 2294-2294. DOI: 10.1121/1.4877537.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2013
Hearing tongue loops: Perceptual sensitivity to acoustic signatures of articulatory dynamics
Nam H, Mooshammer C, Iskarous K, Whalen D. Hearing tongue loops: Perceptual sensitivity to acoustic signatures of articulatory dynamics. The Journal Of The Acoustical Society Of America 2013, 134: 3808-3817. PMID: 24180790, PMCID: PMC3829900, DOI: 10.1121/1.4824161.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2001
Intrinsic F0 and tongue depth in ATR languages
Whalen D, Gick B. Intrinsic F0 and tongue depth in ATR languages. The Journal Of The Acoustical Society Of America 2001, 110: 2761-2761. DOI: 10.1121/1.4777643.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
1987
Qualitative separateness in children's speech
Nittrouer S, Whalen D. Qualitative separateness in children's speech. The Journal Of The Acoustical Society Of America 1987, 82: s84-s84. DOI: 10.1121/1.2025025.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchChildren's speechVowel contextsFricative noiseAdult speechChild speakersPhonetic unitsFricative identificationAcoustic differencesF2 frequenciesAdult listenersAcoustic analysisListenersSpeechGross spectrumPerceptual segmentationAcoustic informationSyllablesYoung childrenAdultsChildrenAllophonesVowelsSpeakersContextHypothesis