UC Berkeley PhonLab Annual Report
Parent: Department of Linguistics
eScholarship stats: Breakdown by Item for October, 2024 through January, 2025
Item | Title | Total requests | Download | View-only | %Dnld |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
3hr9r9cd | What is Phonological Typology? | 458 | 435 | 23 | 95.0% |
4hb059t7 | How (not) to do Phonological Typology: The Case of Pitch-accent | 409 | 146 | 263 | 35.7% |
7f6332bh | The Production and Perception of a Lesbian Speech Style | 243 | 48 | 195 | 19.8% |
1sr5f98x | Tone: Is it Different? | 208 | 12 | 196 | 5.8% |
2zn6n546 | Universals in Phonology | 208 | 39 | 169 | 18.8% |
4w84m8k4 | A Survey of English Vowel Spaces of Asian American Californians | 206 | 14 | 192 | 6.8% |
2m45t9xj | Bantu Tone Overview | 202 | 148 | 54 | 73.3% |
3p19w08r | Just Put Your Lips Together and Blow? The Whistled Fricatives of Southern Bantu | 192 | 29 | 163 | 15.1% |
5k679575 | 1.5 Generation Korean Americans: Consonant and Vowel Production of Two Late Childhood Arrivals | 188 | 13 | 175 | 6.9% |
2fc6x1ph | Speaker Normalization in Speech Perception | 179 | 25 | 154 | 14.0% |
2q6685k5 | Phonetics and Phonology of Urhobo | 159 | 150 | 9 | 94.3% |
1hs7h769 | Closure Duration and VOT of Word-initial Voiceless Plosives in English in Spontaneous Connected Speech | 148 | 26 | 122 | 17.6% |
16c753jz | Vocal Tract Length Normalization | 141 | 27 | 114 | 19.1% |
2384g5v5 | Variation in Palatal Production in Buenos Aires Spanish | 128 | 41 | 87 | 32.0% |
8kf3z3s9 | Resonance in an Exemplar-based Lexicon: The Emergence of Social Identity and Phonology | 124 | 22 | 102 | 17.7% |
47p2w2p0 | How Autosegmental is Phonology? | 116 | 29 | 87 | 25.0% |
8587g0jg | Phonetic Bias in Sound Change | 116 | 96 | 20 | 82.8% |
7gq1s5n4 | Phonetic Accommodation to Non-Native English Speech | 110 | 9 | 101 | 8.2% |
0vp1p7dp | Functional load and frequency predict consonant emergence across five languages | 107 | 7 | 100 | 6.5% |
4fh5b2q7 | Tone, Syntax, and Prosodic Domains in Luganda | 104 | 26 | 78 | 25.0% |
2hs4v5wt | Phonetic vs. Phonological Lengthening in Affricates | 101 | 9 | 92 | 8.9% |
9n00618c | Articulatory Variation of the Alveolar Tap and Implications for Sound Change | 101 | 36 | 65 | 35.6% |
9sf875pc | Perception of Fricatives by Dutch and English Speakers | 101 | 13 | 88 | 12.9% |
4kp306rx | Turbulence & Phonology | 99 | 28 | 71 | 28.3% |
6hc5k2zq | Audio-visual Factors in Stop Debuccalization in Consonant Sequences | 99 | 6 | 93 | 6.1% |
0gk0g18d | More on Post-nasal Devoicing: The Case of Shekgalagari | 98 | 10 | 88 | 10.2% |
0p18z2s3 | Acoustic and Auditory Phonetics, 3rd Edition -- Chapter 5 | 98 | 35 | 63 | 35.7% |
4nr5n1z0 | Elicitation as Experimental Phonology: Thlantlang Lai Tonology | 94 | 10 | 84 | 10.6% |
5qr980vk | Frequency Effects in Cross-linguistic Stop Place Perception: A Case of /t/-/k/ in Japanese and English | 94 | 22 | 72 | 23.4% |
8tx8h40m | The Phonetic Basis of a Phonological Pattern: Depressor Effects of Prenasalized Consonants | 93 | 11 | 82 | 11.8% |
6dc4v2bm | The Phonetics of Register in Takhian Thong Chong | 92 | 6 | 86 | 6.5% |
4cs2g297 | The A-map Model: Articulatory Reliability in Child-specific Phonology | 91 | 7 | 84 | 7.7% |
19n0c4m4 | Correlating Complexity: A Typological Approach | 88 | 11 | 77 | 12.5% |
99s4140b | Effects of Native-language on Compensation for Coarticulation | 88 | 2 | 86 | 2.3% |
9dm8c4rp | English Listeners' Perception of Polish Alveopalatal and Retroflex Voiceless Sibilants: A Pilot Study | 87 | 13 | 74 | 14.9% |
97d2q41z | Word prosody II: Tone systems | 85 | 36 | 49 | 42.4% |
9601x7vt | Low-frequency Fourier Analysis of Speech Rhythm | 84 | 8 | 76 | 9.5% |
9dv1v7fm | On the Analysis of Tone in Mee (Ekari, Ekagi, Kapauku) | 84 | 9 | 75 | 10.7% |
0j86c7st | Understanding Variability in Speech: A Brief Survey Over 2.5 Millennia | 83 | 12 | 71 | 14.5% |
6908x0ts | Single URs vs. Allomorphy: The case of Babanki Coda Consonant Deletion | 81 | 4 | 77 | 4.9% |
1fp2n3qq | Experimental Approaches to Establishing Discreteness of Intonational Contrasts | 80 | 6 | 74 | 7.5% |
22h474d2 | Syntactic Probabilities Affect Pronunciation Variation in Spontaneous Speech | 80 | 2 | 78 | 2.5% |
35d4w2kk | In Search of Prosodic Domains in Lusoga | 78 | 3 | 75 | 3.8% |
5fb5v8jb | Tone and Pitch Accent in Cherokee Nouns | 77 | 11 | 66 | 14.3% |
7sd9x8vc | Multiple Exponence in the Lusoga Verb Stem | 77 | 3 | 74 | 3.9% |
0680h403 | Convergence through Divergence: Compensatory Changes in Phonetic Accommodation | 76 | 4 | 72 | 5.3% |
4vb5969g | Rhythmic Repair of Morphological Accent Assigned Outside of a Metrical Window | 74 | 2 | 72 | 2.7% |
7ws4x0d8 | The Predominant Pitch of Semivowels | 73 | 3 | 70 | 4.1% |
84n009j6 | Phonological Neighborhood Density in the Trevor Corpus: Perception and Production Factors in Lexical Acquisition | 73 | 4 | 69 | 5.5% |
3xp899c0 | Articulatory patterns in contrasting nasal-stop sequences in Panãra | 71 | 6 | 65 | 8.5% |
Note: Due to the evolving nature of web traffic, the data presented here should be considered approximate and subject to revision. Learn more.