Completed PhD theses
In the last thirty-seven years, the following dissertations in Phonetics have been presented at the Department of Linguistics:
Livijn, Peder (2010) A Perceptual and Acoustical Study of the Swedish Coronals in a Dialect Perspective.
Gustavsson, Lisa (2009) The Language Learning Infant: Effects of speech input, vocal output, and feedback.
Thorén, Bosse (2008) The Priority of temporal aspects in L2-Swedish prosody: Studies in perception and production.
Klintfors, Eeva (2008) Emergence of words: Multisensory precursors of sound-meaning associations in infancy
Ericsdotter, Christine (2005) Articulatory-Acoustic Relationships in Swedish Vowel Sounds.
Helgason, Pétur (2002) Preaspiration in the Nordic Languages. Synchronic and diachronic aspects.
All of the above theses are available in electronic format via the Stockholm University bibliographic database DIVA and on the authors’ personal web pages.
The following doctoral theses in Phonetics will be avaliable online under Publications:
Sundberg, Ulla (1998) Mother tongue-Phonetic Aspects of Infant-Directed Speech (PERILUS XXI)
Rough-Hellichius, Liselotte (1998) Babble, Grunts and Words: A study of phonetic shape and functional use in the beginnings of language (PERILUS XX)
Holmberg, Eva (1993) Aerodynamic measurements of normal voice (PERILUS XVI)
Krull, Diana (1988) Acoustic properties as predictors of perceptual responses: A study of Swedish voiced stops (PERILUS VII)
Lacerda, Francisco (1987) Effects of peripheral auditory adaption on the discrimination of speech sounds (PERILUS VI)
Traunmüller, Hartmut (1983) On Vowels: Perception of Spectral Features, Related Aspects of Production and Sociophonetic Dimensions
Lyberg, Bertil (1981) Temporal properties of spoken Swedish (MILUS 6)
McAllister, Robert (1978) Labial function in Swedish vowels (MILUS 4)
Svensson, Stig-Göran (1974) Prosody and grammar in speech perception (MILUS 2)
Last updated:
April 25, 2011
Page editor:
Ulla Bjursäter
Source: Department of linguistics
