Organisator(en) | Rudolph Sock, Susanne Fuchs & Yves Laprie |
Veranstaltungsbeginn | 08.12.2008, 09.00 Uhr |
Veranstaltungsende | 12.12.2008, 18.00 Uhr |
Ort | Strasbourg |
Conference website |
The eighth International Seminar on Speech Production (ISSP'08) will be held in Strasbourg, France from the 8th to the 12th of December, 2008. This edition follows a series started in Grenoble (1988), Leeds (1990), Old Saybrook (1993), Autrans (1996), Kloster Seeon (2000), Sydney (2003), and Ubatuba (2006). ISSP'08 will cover several aspects of speech production, such as phonology, phonetics, linguistics, mechanics, acoustics, physiology, motor control, the neurosciences and computer science.
Strasbourg is the capital and the main city of the region of Alsace, in the northeast of France. Strasbourg hosts several European institutions such as the Council of Europe with its European Court of Human Rights.
Strasbourg's historic centre, the Grande Île ("Grand Island"), was classified a World Heritage site by UNESCO in 1988. Strasbourg is beautifully merged into the Franco-German culture, and is regarded as the bridge for Germanic and Latin cultures.
Looking forward to seeing you in Strasbourg, from the 8th to the 12th of December 2008.
Monday, December 8th9:30Welcome coffee, registration
11:00Invited SpeakerVincent GRACCO |
14:00 - Oral 1 On somatosensory and auditory goals14.00-14.25Joseph Perkell, Satrajit Ghosh, Frank Guenther, Harlan Lane, Melanie Matthies, Lucie Ménard and Mark Tiede Mechanisms of vowel production: Auditory goals and speaker acuity
14.25-14.50 Takayuki Ito and David Ostry Speech motor adaptation using facial skin stretch
14.50-15.15 Jianwu Dang, Xugang Lu, Mark Tiede and Kiyoshi Honda Investigation of inherent vowel structures in speech production and perception spaces
15.15-15.40 Ludo Max, Jennifer C. Daniels and Karla M. Curet Auditory and somatosensory processing are modulated during the planning of speech movements
15.40-16.05 Jana Brunner, Phil Hoole and Pascal Perrier The use of sensory feedback in the adaptation of perturbed /s/
16.05-16.30 Shanqing Cai, Marc Boucek, Satrajit Ghosh, Frank Guenther and Joseph Perkell A system for online dynamic perturbation of formant trajectories |
Monday, December 8th17:00 - Oral 2: Recent methodological developments
17.00-17.25 Christophe Jeannin, Pascal Perrier, Yohan Payan, Brigitte Grosgogeat, André Dittmar and Claudine Géhin PRESLA: An original device to measure the mechanical interaction between tongue and teeth or palate during speech production
17.25-17.50 Mathews Jacob, Heike Lehnert-LeHouillier, Stephen McAleavey, Joyce McDonough and Diane Dalecki The use of speckle tracking for the recovery of displacement and velocity information from sequences of ultrasound images of the tongue
17.50-18.15 Alan Wrench and James Scobbie High-speed cineloop ultrasound vs. video ultrasound tongue imaging: Comparison of front and back lingual gesture location and relative timing
18.15-18.40 Christian Kroos Measurement accuracy in 3D Electromagnetic Articulography (Carstens AG500) |
Tuesday, December 9th9:00Invited speaker:Gregor SCHOENER |
10:15 - Oral 3: On synergies and planning units10.15-10.40 Pascal Perrier and Liang Ma: Speech planning for V1CV2 sequences Influence of the planned sequence
10.40-11.05 Bettina Brendel, Axel Riecker, Michael Erb, Wolfram Ziegler and Hermann Ackermann Do we have a "mental syllabary" in the brain? An fMRI study
11.05-11.30 Susanne Fuchs, Phil Hoole, Dominique Vornwald, Anne Gwinner, Hristo Velkov and JelenaKrivokapic The control of speech breathing in relation to the upcoming sentence
11.30-11.55 Aude Noiray, Khalil Iskarous and D. H. Whalen Tongue-jaw synergy in vowel height production: Evidence from American English
11.55-12.20 Mark Latash and Irina Mikaelian Linear and logarithmic speed-accuracy trade-offs in speech production |
Tuesday, December 9th14:00 - POSTER Ia: Phonetics-Phonology Interface
1. Kofi Adu Manyah. On quantity and quality of oral and nasal vowels in Twi.
2. Ioana Chitoran and Khalil Iskarous. Acoustic evidence for high vowel devoicing
3. Myriam Piccaluga, Dolors Poch-Olivé and Bernard Harmegnies. Effects of the multilingual phonologic competence on the phonetic properties of filled pauses
4. Amanda Miller. Click cavity formation and dissolution in IsiXhosa: Viewing Clicks with High-Speed Ultrasound
5. Marzena Zygis, Daniel Recasens and Aina Espinosa. Testing the acoustic equivalence hypothesis on velar softening with production data for German, Polish and Catalan
6. Karim Shoul. An acoustic study of the place of articulation of emphatic and non-emphatic voiceless stops in Moroccan Arabic
7. Chakir Zeroual, Phil Hoole and Adamantios Gafos. Spatio-temporal and kinematic study of Moroccan Arabic coronal geminate plosives
8. Wai-Sum Lee. The articulation of the coronal sounds in the Peking dialect
9. Fayssal Bouarourou, Béatrice Vaxelaire, Fabrice Hirsch and Rudolph Sock. Gemination in Tarifit Berber
10. Sonja Schaeffler, James Scobbie and Ineke Mennen. An evaluation of inter-speech postures for the study of language-specific articulatory settings
11. Eric Zee and Wai-Sum Lee. The articulatory characteristics of the palatals, palatalized velars, and velars in Hakka Chinese
12. Mária Gósy and Viktória Horváth. Acoustic-phonetic analysis of two words on the way to becoming fillers
13. Stefanie Jannedy, Susanne Fuchs and Melanie Weirich. Schwa out of control?
14. Véronique Delvaux, Kathy Huet and Myriam Piccaluga. Perceptually driven VOT lengthening in initial stops by French-L1 English L2-learners
15. Fang Hu. The three sibilants in Standard Chinese
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Tuesday, December 9th14:00 - POSTER Ib: Modelling in Speech Production
16. Martine Toda, Shinji Maeda, Michael Aron and Marie-Odile Berger. Modeling subject-dependent formant patterns in /asha/ sequences
17. Blaise Potard and Yves Laprie. Improving the sampling of the null space of the acoustic-to-articulatory mapping
18. Michael Aron, Marie-Odile Berger and Erwan Kerrien. Multimodal fusion of electromagnetic, ultrasound and MRI data for building an articulatory model
19. Mohammad Ali Nazari, Yohan Payan, Pascal Perrier, Matthieu Chabanas and Claudio Lobos. A continuous biomechanical model of the face: a study of muscle coordinations for speech lip gestures
20. Bernd J. Kroeger, Jim Kannampuzha and Christiane Neuschaefer-Rube. Performing identification and discrimination experiments for vowels and voiced plosives by using a neurocomputational model of speech production and perception
21. Antoine Serrurier, Anna Barney, Pierre Badin, Louis-Jean Boë and Christophe Savariaux. Comparative articulatory modelling of speech and feeding
22. Fabian Brackhane and Juergen Trouvain. What makes "mama" and "papa" acceptable? Experiments with a replica of von Kempelen's speaking machine
23. Susanne Fuchs, Ralf Winkler and Pascal Perrier. Does the speaker's vocal tract geometry shape its articulatory vowel space?
24. Ronald Sprouse. A discrete time aerodynamic model of the vocal tract
25. Kotaro Fukui, Yuma Ishikawa, Eiji Shintaku , Atsuo Takanishi and Masaaki Honda. Vocal cord model to control various voices for anthropomorphic talking robot
26. Eva Lasarcyk and Juergen Trouvain. Spread lips + raised larynx + higher F0 = smiled speech? - An articulatory synthesis approach |
Tuesday, December 9th16:20 - Oral 4: Speech and language pathologies
16.20-16.45 Claude Mauk and Martha Tyrone Sign lowering as phonetic reduction in American sign language
16.45-17.10 Danielle Duez, Thierry Legou and François Viallet Final lengthening in Parkinsonian French speech
17.10-17.35 Lawrence Shriberg Comparative studies in neurodevelopmental and idiopathic childhood apraxia of speech (CAS)
17.35-18.00 Lucie Menard, Annie Leclerc, Amélie Brisebois, Jérôme Aubin and Annie Brasseur Production and perception of French vowels in blind speakers and sighted speakers
18.00-18.25 Fabrice Hirsch, Fayssal Bouarourou, Béatrice Vaxelaire, Marion Bechet, Jean Sturm and Rudolph Sock Formant structures of vowels produced by stutterers |
Wednesday, December 10th.9.00Invited speaker:Alexis MICHAUD
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Wednesday, December 10th.10:15 - POSTER IIa: Coarticulation, prosody and frequency effects
1. Oliver Niebuhr, Christine Meunier and Leonardo Lancia. On place assimilation in French sibilant sequences
2. Marion Jaeger and Phil Hoole. Articulatory patterns underlying regressive place assimilation across word-boundaries in German
3. Adrian Simpson and Sven Grawunder. Intraoral pressure variation in nasal–plosive and plosive/plosive sequences in German
4. Mohamed Yeou, Kiyoshi Honda and Shinji Maeda. Laryngeal adjustments in the production of consonant clusters and geminates in Moroccan Arabic
5. Jessica Miller. Tonal alignment distinctions between standard French and Vaudois Swiss French
6. Amélie Rochet-Capellan, Coriande Vilain, Dohen Marion, Rafael Laboissière and Jean-Luc Schwartz. Does the number of syllables affect the finger pointing movement in a pointing-naming task?
7. Mitsuhiro Nakamura. Articulatory characteristics of function words in English: a case study
8. Barbara Gili Fivela, Sonia d'Apolito, Antonio Stella and Francesco Sigona. Domain initial strengthening and sociophonetic aspects: EMA and ultrasound data on initial plosive bilabials in two varieties of Italian
9. Mary Ann Walter. Repetition leads to lenition in consonant sequences
10. Clément Moulin-Frier and Jean-Luc Schwartz. Emergence of a language through deictic games within a society of sensori-motor agents in interaction
11. Judit Bóna, Tekla Etelka Gráczi and Alexandra Marko. Coarticulation rules and speaking style dependency
12. Volha Olga Anufryk. Effects of language ability on phonetic and phonological variation of English intonation by German speakers
13. Tanja Kocjancic. Ultrasound investigation of tongue movements in syllables with different onset structure
14. Mária Gósy and András Beke. Anticipatory coarticulation in a specific context
15. Natalia Zharkova. An EPG and ultrasound study of lingual coarticulation in vowel-consonant sequences
16. Doris Muecke, Martine Grice and Raphaela Kirst. Prosodic and lexical effects on German place assimilation |
Wednesday, December 10th10:15 - POSTER IIb: Acquisition, processing and exploitation of articulatory data
17. Thomas Hueber, Gerard Chollet, Bruce Denby and Maureen Stone. Acquisition of ultrasound, video and acoustic speech data for a silent-speech interface application
18. Thierry Legou, Alain Marchal, Yohann Meynadier and Carine André. 3D Palatography
19. James Scobbie, Alan Wrench and Marietta van der Linden. Head-probe stabilisation in ultrasound tongue imaging using a headset to permit natural head movement
20. Philip Jackson and Veena D. Singampalli. Coarticulatory constraints determined by automatic identification from articulograph data
21. Vincent Robert, Yves Laprie and Jacques Feldmar. Comparison between two predicting methods of labial coarticulation
22. Jorge Lucero and Kevin G. Munhall. Identification of independent kinematic regions of the face during speech production |
Wednesday, December 10th10:15 - POSTER IIc: Speech and language acquisition
23. Natalia Zharkova, Nigel Hewlett and William J. Hardcastle. An ultrasound study of lingual coarticulation in children and adults
24. Louis-Jean Boë, Guillaume Captier, Jean Granat, Marie-Josèphe Deshayes, Peter Birkholz, Pierre Badin and Nicolas Kielwasser. Skull and vocal tract growth from fetus to 2 years
25. Ian Howard and Piers Messum. Modelling motor pattern generation in the development of infant speech production
26. Sigrun Lang, Stefanie Leistner, Patricia Sandrieser and Bernd J. Kroeger. Early vocal development in a normally hearing infant and a young cochlear implant recipient
27. Krisztina Zajdo and Stacey Powell. The acquisition and modeling of phonological vowel length in Hungarian
28. Joanne Arciuli and Sharynne McLeod. Production of /st/ clusters in trochaic and iambic contexts by typically developing children
29. Mélanie Canault, Rafael Laboissière, Pascal Perrier and Rudolph Sock. Development of lingual displacement independence at babbling stage |
14.30-15.45Boat Tour through Strasbourg
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19.30ISSP 2008Gala Dinner, at the Jardin de l’Orangerie |
Thursday, December 11th9.00Invited speaker:Sadao HIROYA |
Thursday, December 11th10:15 - Oral 5: Acoustic-to-articulatory inversion
10.15-10.40 Athanassios Katsamanis, Anastasios Roussos and Petros Maragos Inversion from audiovisual speech to articulatory information by exploiting multimodal data
10.40-11.05 Gopal Ananthakrishnan and Olov Engwall Important regions in the articulator trajectory
11.05-11.30 Jean Schoentgen, Abdellah Kacha and Francis Grenez A hybrid acoustic-articulatory model of the speech spectrum
11.30-11.55 Ingmar Steiner Generating gestural timing from EMA data using articulatory resynthesis
11.55-12.20 Asterios Toutios, Slim Ouni and Yves Laprie Protocol for a model-based evaluation of a dynamic acoustic-to-articulatory inversion method using Electromagnetic Articulography |
Thursday, December 11th14.00 - POSTER IIIa: Speech, language and hearing disorders
1. Lucile Rapin, Hélène Loevenbruck and Dohen Marion. Collecting traces of activity in orofacial muscles during auditory verbal hallucinations in schizophrenic patients
2. Andreas Maier, Tino Haderlein, Maria Schuster and Elmar Nöth. Hypernasality in speech of children with cleft lip and palate: automatic evaluation
3. Claire Timmins, William Hardcastle, Joanne McCann, Sara Wood and Jennifer Wishart. Coarticulation in children with Down’s syndrome: an Electropalatographic analysis
4. Ali Alpan, Francis Grenez, Marc Remacle and Jean Schoentgen. Multi-band segmental signal-to-dysperiodicity ratios in connected speech produced by normophonicand dysphonic speakers
5. Frank Rudzicz, Pascal H.M. Van Lieshout, Graeme Hirst, Gerald Penn and Fraser Shein. Towards a comparative database of dysarthric articulation
6. Kathryn Hird and Kim Kirsner. Compromised speech processing in language disorders
7. Anja Moos, Ingo Hertrich, Susanne Dietrich, Jürgen Trouvain and Hermann Ackermann. Perception of ultra-fast speech by a blind listener: does he use his visual system?
8. Marion Bechet, Véronique Ferbach-Hecker, Fabrice Hirsch, Rudolph Sock, BéatriceVaxelaire and Jean-Luc Stierlé. The production of stops in VCV sequences in children with a cleft palate: an acoustic study
9. Lucie Menard, Annie Leclerc, Amélie Briseboie, Jérôme Aubin and Annie Brasseur Production and perception of French vowels by blind and sighted speakers
10. Johanna-Pascale Roy, Joël Macoir and Marion Fossard. A case of foreign accent syndrome: an acoustic description for a French-speaking subject |
Thursday, December 11th14.00 - POSTER IIIb: Motor control, feedback and other issues
11. Sandrine Clairet. Compensating for a bite-block in lingual stop consonants production in French: articulatory and acoustic study
12. Rafael Laboissière, Daniel Lametti and David Ostry. Role of impedance control in achieving precision in orofacial movement
13. David Purcell and Kevin G. Munhall. Weighting of auditory feedback across the English vowel space
14. Silvia Lipski, Martine Grice and Ingo Meister. Auditory perception influences speech motor learning
15. Ewen MacDonald, Elizabeth Pile, Hilmi Dajani and Kevin G. Munhall. The specificity of adaptation to real-time formant shifting
16. Sazzad M. Nasir and David J. Ostry. Speech motor adaptation without auditory feedback
17. Stephane Mortreux. English coronal consonants produced by L2 French learners: an articulatory and acoustic study. |
Thursday, December 11th16.20 - Oral 6: Aerodynamics and related issues16.20-16.45 Christine Shadle, Maria Berezina, Michael Proctor and Khalil Iskarous Mechanical models of fricatives based on MRI-derived vocal tract shapes
16.45-17.10 Ryan Shosted An aerodynamic explanation for the uvularization of trills
17.10-17.35 Marzena Zygis and Susanne Fuchs Why are voiced affricates avoided cross-linguistically? Evidence from an aerodynamic study
17.35-18.00 Ronald Sprouse, Maria-Josep Sole and John Ohala: Oral cavity enlargement in retroflex sounds
18.00-18.25 Khalil Iskarous, Christine Shadle and Michael Proctor: Evidence for the dynamic nature of fricative production: American English /s/ |
Friday, December 12th
9.00Invited speaker:Marianne POUPLIER |
10.15 - Oral 7: Phonetics and phonology of vowels and consonant clusters10.15-10.40 Anne Hermes, Martine Grice, Doris Muecke and Henrik Niemann Articulatory indicators of syllable affiliation in word initial consonant clusters in Italian
10.40-11.05 Stefania Marin and Marianne Pouplier Organization of complex onsets and codas in American English: Evidence for a competitive coupling model
11.05-11.30 Cecile Fougeron and Rachid Ridouane On the nature of schwa-like vocalic elements within some Berber clusters
11.30-11.55 Susanne Waltl and Phil Hoole An EMG study of the German vowel system
11.55-12.20 Katalin Mády and Lasse Bombien Is Hungarian loosing the vowel quantity distinction? |