Downloadable publications by Carlos Gussenhoven

Heijmans, Linda & Carlos Gussenhoven (1998). [pdf]The Dutch dialect of Weert. Journal of the International Phonetic Association (JIPA) 28, 107-112.

Gussenhoven, Carlos & Flor Aarts (1999). [pdf]  The dialect of Maastricht. Journal of the International Phonetic Association 29 (2), 155-166.

Gussenhoven C. (1999).  [Powerpoint Presentation]Why question intonations rise, and why they sometimes fall. Powerpoint presentation of lecture. A written version is to be published by Michael Hoey & N?lia Scott (eds.) Questions: Multiple Perspectives on a Common Phenomenon. Language and Discourse Series Liverpool: University of Liverpool Press.

Gussenhoven, Carlos (2000). [pdf]  The lexical tone contrast of Roermond Dutch in Optimality Theory. In Merle Horne (ed.) Intonation: Theory and Experiment. Amsterdam: Kluwer. 129-167. Also ROA-382.

Gussenhoven, C. & A.-J. Chen (2000). [pdf]   Universal and language-specific effects in the perception of question intonation. International Conference on the Processing of Spoken Language (ICSLP) 6. Volume II. Beijing. 91-94.

Gussenhoven, C. (2001).  [pdf]  Suprasegmentals. In N. J. Smelser and
Paul B. Baltes (eds)  International Encyclopedia of the Social and the Behavioural Sciences. Oxford: Pergamon. 15294-15298.

Chen, A.J., Rietveld, A., and Gussenhoven, C. (2001).   [pdf]  Language-specific Effects of Pitch Range on the Perception of Universal Intonational Meaning. EUROSPEECH  9, II: 1403-1406.

Gussenhoven, C. (2002).  [pdf]  Phonology of intonation. State-of-the-Article. GLOT International 6 (Nos 9/10).  271-284.

Chen, Aoju and Gussenhoven, C. and Rietveld T. (2002).   [pdf]Language-specific uses of the Effort Code. Speech Prosody 2002: Proceedings of the First International Conference on Speech Prosody. Aix-en-Provence, ProSig and Universit? de Provence Laboratoire Parole et Language. 211-214.

Gussenhoven, C. (2002).  [pdf]Intonation and interpretation: Phonetics and Phonology. Speech Prosody 2002: Proceedings of the First International Conference on Speech Prosody. Aix-en-Provence, ProSig and Universite de Provence Laboratoire Parole et Language. 47-57.

Gussenhoven, Carlos (2003).  [pdf]Comments of "Tonal variation in Swedish" by G?sta Bruce. In S. Kaji (ed.) Proceedings of the International Symposium on  Crosslinguistic Studies of Tonal Phenomena 2002. Tokyo: Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies.

Chen, A.J. and Gussenhoven, C. (2003). [pdf]  Language-dependence in the signalling of attitude in speech. Noriko Suzuki & Christoph Bartneck (eds.), Proceedings of workshop on the Subtle Expressivity of Emotion at CHI 2003 conference on Human and Computer Interaction.

Rietveld, T., Kerkhoff, J. and Gussenhoven, C. (2004).   [pdf]   Word prosodic structure and vowel duration in Dutch. Journal of Phonetics 32, 349-371.

Gussenhoven, C. (in press).  [pdf]Vowel duration, syllable quantity and stress in Dutch. In Kristin Hanson and Sharon Inkelas (eds).  The Nature of the Word:
Essays in Honor of Paul Kiparsky. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. [Also
ROA 381.]

Gussenhoven, C. (2004). The Phonology of Tone and Intonation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. To Site

Gussenhoven, C. (in press). [pdf]  Transcription of Dutch Intonation.   In Sun-Ah Jun (ed.) Prosodic Typology and  Transcription: A Unified Approach. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Gussenhoven, C. (forthcoming). [pdf]  Types of Focus in English. In Daniel B?ring, Matthew Gordon & Chungmin Lee (eds.) Topic and Focus: Intonation and Meaning. Theoretical and Crosslinguistic Perspectives. Dordrecht: Kluwer.

Gussenhoven, C. (submitted).  [pdf]  Procliticized Phonological Phrases in English: Evidence from rhythm. Studia Linguistica.

Gussenhoven, C. & Driessen, W. (2004). [pdf]  Explaining two correlations between vowel quality and tone: The duration connection. Prosody 2004. Nara, Japan. 

Gussenhoven, C. (2003). Pitch Variation and Pragamatic Meaning. [powerpoint presentation]  6th NWCL International Conference. Prosody and Pragmatics. 14-16 November 2003. University of Central Lancashire.

Gussenhoven, C. (2004). A vowel height split explained: Compensatory Listening and Speaker Control [powerpoint presentation]  LabPhon9, Urbana Champaign, Illinois.