PUBLICATIONS (in reverse chronological order)

 

 

2009

 

Redford, M.A., Gildersleeve-Neumann, C.E. (in press). The development of distinct speaking styles in preschool children. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research.

 

2008

 

Redford, M.A. (2008). Production constraints on learning novel onset phonotactics. Cognition, 107, 785—816.

 

Redford, M.A., van Donkelaar, P. (2008). Jaw cycles and linguistic syllables in adult English. In Davis, B.L., Zajdo, K. (eds.), Syllable Development: The Frame/Content Theory and Beyond (pp. 355-76). London: Taylor & Francis.

 

2007

 

Doty, C. Redford, M.A. (2007). Stress and boundary effects on anticipatory and preservatory nasal airflow. In Proceedings from the 16th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, (ICPhS-07 Saarbrücken, Germany).

 

Redford, M.A. (2007). Word-internal versus word-peripheral consonantal duration patterns in three languages. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 121, 1665—78.

 

Redford, M.A., Gildersleeve-Neumann, C.E. (2007). The acquisition of two phonetic cues to word boundaries. Journal of Child Language 34, 815—43.

 

Redford, M.A., Gildersleeve-Neuman, C.E. (2007). Children's clear speech suggests word-level targets: preliminary evidence. In Proceedings from the 16th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, (ICPhS-07 Saarbrücken, Germany).

 

Redford, M.A., Miikkulainen, R. (2007). Rate effects on structure in a source-filter model of phonological development. Language 83, 737—69.

 

 

2005

 

Redford, M.A., Randall, P. (2005). The role of juncture cues and phonological knowledge in English syllabification judgments. Journal of Phonetics 33, 27—46.

 

2004

 

Redford, M.A. (2004). Origin of consonant duration patterns. In Agwuele, A. Warren, W., Park, S-H. (eds.) Proceedings from the 8th Annual Texas Linguistics Society Conference: Coarticulation in Speech Production and Perception, pp. 54-61. Cascadilla Press.

 

Redford, M.A., Davis, B.L., Miikkulainen, R. (2004). Phonetic variability and prosodic structure in motherese. Infant Behavior and Development 27, 477—98.

 

2003

 

Redford, M.A. (2003). Cognitive template for a phonetic correlate of syllable structure. In Solé, M.J., Recasens, D., Romero, J. (eds.), Proceedings from the 15th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, (ICPhS-03 Barcelona, Spain), pp. 2261-2264. Casual Productions.

 

2001

 

Redford, M.A., Chen, C.C., Miikkulainen, R. (2001). Constrained emergence of universals and variation in syllable systems. Language and Speech 44, 27—56.

 

Redford, M. A., Miikkulainen, R. (2001). Abrupt and Gradual Sound Change in an Expanding Lexicon. The University of Texas at Austin, Department of Computer Sciences. AI Technical Report 01-289. June 2001. 24 pages.

 

1999

 

Redford, M.A. (1999). The mandibular cycle and reversed-sonority onset clusters in Russian. In Ohala, J.J., Hasegawa, Y., Ohala, M., Granvill, D., Bailey, A.C. (eds.), Proceedings from the 14th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, (ICPhS-99 San Francisco, USA), pp. 1893-1896. American Institute of Physics.

 

Redford, M.A. (1999). An articulatory basis for the syllable. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, The University of Texas, Austin.

 

Redford, M.A., Diehl, R.L. (1999). The relative perceptual distinctiveness of initial and final consonants in CVC syllables. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 106, 1555—65.

 

1998

 

 

Cohen, L.B., Amsel, G., Redford, M.A., Casasola, M. (1998). The development of infant causal perception. In Slater, A. (ed.), Perceptual Development: Visual, Auditory, and Speech Perception in Infancy (pp. 167-209). London: Taylor & Francis.

 

Redford, M.A., Chen, C.C., Miikkulainen, R. (1998). Modeling the emergence of syllable systems. In Proceedings of the 20th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, (COGSCI-98 Madison, WI), pp. 882-886. Hilsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.

 

1997

 

Redford, M.A., MacNeilage, P.F., Davis, B.L. (1997). Production constraints on utterance-final consonant characteristics in babbling. Phonetica 54, 172—86.