All regular meetings are on Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. in the Linguistics Department conference room unless otherwise noted.
- organizational meeting
– Mairym Llórens Monteserin – Consolidating the PRS Coda Condition; Andrés Benítez Pozo – A Real-Time MRI Study of Articulatory Setting in Second Language Speech; Caitlin Smith – Nasal spreading as defective gestural activation; Peter Guekguezian – The great Chukchansi Yokuts iambic conspiracy
– Samantha Gordon– What do you call a person from...?; Brian Hsu – Information structure features and the syntax-prosody mapping of Bangla embedded clauses: implications for Match theory; Charlie O'Hara – Pathological effects of local disjunction
– Timo Röttger – Vowel emergence driven by the tune. Evidence from Tashlhiyt Berber
– Fang-Ying Hsieh – Gesture coordination in English diphthongs /ai/ and /au/
– Andrés Benítez Pozo – Visual entrainment and amplification of speech; Alif Silpachai – The emergence of the polysyllabic word in non-polysyllabic languages
– Cynthia Lee – Articulatory characteristics of liquid production in Korean: position-sensitive realization; Afton Coombs – Intermediate stress lengthening: evidence from Tagalog
– Samantha Gordon – Selectional effects of allomorph competition; Jessica Harmon – The simultaneous timing of adjunct adverbs and verbs in ASL
– Reed Blaylock – A proposal for unifying morphologically derived environment effects and derived environment blocking; Peter Guekguezian – Verb root shape in Yokuts: a consequence of morpholoigcal and prosodic structure
– Alexsandro Meireles (Federal University of Espirito Santo) – Palatalization of coronals before [i] in Brazilian Portuguese
– Caitlin Smith – Gestural deactivation in nasal spreading
– Christina Hagedorn – Characterizing post-glossectomy speech using rtMRI
– USC/UCLA Phonology Seminar Meeting – Karen Jesney – Complex process interaction in Ponapean
– Charlie O'Hara – Vowel raising and positional privilege in Klamath; Alexsandro Meireles (Federal University of Espirito Santo) – Emergence of [j] in Brazilian Portuguese well-formed syllabic structures