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Electrophysiological and Acoustic Correlates of Stress and Stress Perception
27
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0
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1966
Year
PsychoacousticsSpeech SciencesStress DetectionAffective NeuroscienceAcquired Apraxia Of SpeechSpeech Sound DisorderPsycholinguisticsSpeech SciencePhonologyPsychologyInternal SpeechStressSpeech ProsodyPhoneticsSpeech DecodingProsody (Film Studies)Language StudiesAcoustic AnalysisStress BiomarkersHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceStress PerceptionSpeech ProductionProsody (Linguistics)Speech AcousticSpeech CommunicationHearing SciencesPsychological StressSpeech AcousticsMotor SpeechSpeech PerceptionEmotionLinguistics
No AccessJournal of Speech and Hearing ResearchResearch Article1 Jun 1966Electrophysiological and Acoustic Correlates of Stress and Stress Perception Ivan Fónagy Ivan Fónagy Hungarian Academy of Science, Institute of Linguistics, Budapest, Hungary Google Scholar https://doi.org/10.1044/jshr.0902.231 SectionsAboutPDF ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationTrack Citations ShareFacebookTwitterLinked In A theory of stress is proposed. On the basis of a series of acoustic, pneumographic, electrophysiological, and perceptual measurements, it is hypothesized that stress is a function of greater speaking effort. The terms dynamic, melodic, quantitative accent, prominence by stress, prominence by length, prominence by intonation are considered to be misleading. The projection of greater effort on the acoustic level as well as perceptual cues of stress are studied. Additional Resources FiguresReferencesRelatedDetailsCited by The Linguistic Review34:1 (157-213)The Foot is not an obligatory constituent of the Prosodic Hierarchy: "stress" in Turkish, French and child EnglishÖner Özçelik Speech Communication102 (14-26)1 Sep 2018Prosodic stress detection for fixed stress languages using formal atom decomposition and a statistical hidden Markov hybridGyörgy Szaszák, Máté Ákos Tündik and Branislav Gerazov Language Acquisition25:3 (231-267)3 Jul 2018Universal Grammar and second language phonology: Full Transfer / Prevalent Access in the L2 Acquisition of Turkish "Stress" by English and French SpeakersÖner Özçelik Language and Speech60:4 (571-596)1 Dec 2017Word-level prominence in Persian: An Experimental StudyVahid Sadeghi The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America135:1 (362-368)1 Jan 2014The accuracy of a voice voteIngo R. Titze and Anil Palaparthi International Journal of American Linguistics78:2 (239-272)1 Apr 2012The Phonetics of Fortis and Lenis Consonants in Itunyoso TriqueChristian T. Dicanio Harry Hollien (1990) Speech Decoding and Transcripts The Acoustics of Crime10.1007/978-1-4899-0673-1_7 Harry Hollien (1990) Psychological Stress and Psychosis The Acoustics of Crime10.1007/978-1-4899-0673-1_12 Journal of Fluency Disorders6:2 (95-118)1 Jun 1981Sound and pattern in artificial fluency: Spectrographic evidenceMarcel Wingate Journal of Phonetics9:1 (35-48)1 Jan 1981Effect of vowel quality on perception of post–vocalic nasal consonants in noiseEric Zee Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences347:1 Forensic Psyc (47-72)1 Jun 1980VOCAL INDICATORS OF PSYCHOLOGICAL STRESSHarry Hollien Journal of Psycholinguistic Research3:3 (247-259)1 Jul 1974The reliability of ratings by linguistically untrained subjects in response to stress in speechJoseph J. McDowall International Journal of Man-Machine Studies2:2 (107-155)1 Apr 1970Towards Versatile Speech Communication with ComputersWayne A. Lea Richard Luchsinger and Gottfried E. Arnold (1970) Physiologie der Sprachlaute Handbuch der Stimm- und Sprachheilkunde10.1007/978-3-7091-7130-1_11 Volume 9Issue 2June 1966Pages: 231-244 Get Permissions Add to your Mendeley library HistoryReceived: Jan 3, 1966 Published in issue: Jun 1, 1966PubMed ID: 5925527 Metrics Topicsasha-topicsasha-article-typesCopyright & PermissionsCopyright © 1966 American Speech-Language-Hearing AssociationPDF downloadLoading ...