List of Publications by Paul Warren
On this page:
- Books
- Refereed journal articles
- Chapters in books
- Book reviews
- Other publications
- Published conference presentations
- Conference presentations
Books
Warren, Paul. 2008, ed. Laboratory Phonology 11 - Book of Abstracts. Wellington.
Bauer, Laurie, Janet Holmes & Paul Warren. 2006. Language Matters. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Warren, Paul, & Catherine I. Watson. eds., 2006. Proceedings of the Eleventh Australasian International Conference on Speech Science and Technology (cdrom) Canberra: Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association Inc.
Warren, Paul. 1996, ed. Prosody and Parsing. Hillsdale, NJ & Hove: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Refereed Journal Articles
Warren, Paul. 2008. The Language We use. New Zealand English Journal, 22, 45-53.
Warren, Paul. 2007. Teaching Psycholinguistics Te Reo, 50, 61-70.
Bauer, Laurie, Paul Warren, Dianne Bardsley, Marianna Kennedy, & George Major. 2007. Illustrations of the IPA: New Zealand English Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 37(1), 97-102.
Warren, Paul. 2006. Oops, I've done a futt: quality and quantity in a New Zealand vowel contrast Te Reo, 49, 125-143.
Hay, Jen, Paul Warren, & Katie Drager. 2006. Factors influencing speech perception in the context of a merger-in-progress Journal of Phonetics, 34(4), 458-484.
Warren, Paul. 2005. Issues in the study of intonation in language varieties. Language and Speech, 48(4), 345-358.
Warren, P. 2005. Patterns of late rising in New Zealand - intonational variation or intonational change? Language Variation and Change, 17(2).
Xie, H., Andreae, P., Zhang, M., & Warren, P. 2004a. Learning models for English speech recognition. Australian Computer Science Communications, 26(1).
Xie, H., Andreae, P., Zhang, M., & Warren, P. 2004b. Detecting stress in spoken English using decision trees and support vector machines. Australian Computer Science Communications, 26(7).
Warren, Paul. 2002. NZSED: Building and using a speech database for New Zealand English. NZ English Journal, 16, 53-58.
Rae, Megan and Paul Warren. 2002. Goldilocks and the three beers: Sound merger and word recognition in NZE. NZ English Journal, 16: 33-41.
Daly, Nicola & Paul Warren. 2001. Pitching it differently in New Zealand English: speaker sex and intonation patterns. Journal of Sociolinguistics, 5(1), 85-96.
Warren, P., Schafer, A.J., Speer, S.R., & White, S.D. (2000). Prosodic resolution of prepositional phrase ambiguity and unambiguous situations. UCLA Working Papers in Phonetics, 99: 5-33.
Schafer, Amy J., Shari R. Speer, Paul Warren & S. David White. 2000. Intonational disambiguation in sentence production and comprehension. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 29, 169-182
Warren, Paul. 1998. Timing patterns in New Zealand English rhythm. Te Reo, 41, 80-93.
Warren, Paul. 1996. Prosody and parsing: an introduction. Language and Cognitive Processes, 11, 1-16.
Holst, Tara, Paul Warren, & Francis Nolan. 1995. Categorising [s], [ß] and intermediate electropalatographic patterns: neural networks and other approaches. European Journal of Disorders of Communication, 30, 161-174.
Warren, Paul, Esther Grabe & Francis Nolan. 1995. Prosody, phonology and parsing in closure ambiguities. Language and Cognitive Processes, 10, 457-486.
Warren, Paul, Francis Nolan, Esther Grabe & Tara Holst. 1995. Post-lexical and prosodic phonological processing. Language and Cognitive Processes, 10, 411-417.
Grabe, Esther, Paul Warren & Francis Nolan. 1994. Resolving category ambiguities–evidence from stress shift. Speech Communication, 15, 101-114.
Hawkins, Sarah & Paul Warren. 1994. Phonetic influences on the intelligibility of conversational speech. Journal of Phonetics, 22, 493-511.
Marslen-Wilson, William D. & Paul Warren. 1994 Levels of perceptual representation and process in lexical access: words, phonemes, and features. Psychological Review, 101, 653-675.
Marslen-Wilson, William D., Lorraine K. Tyler, Paul Warren, Paula Grenier & Catherine S. Lee. 1992. Prosodic effects in minimal attachment Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 45, 73-87.
Hawkins, Sarah & Paul Warren. 1991. Factors affecting the given-new distinction in speech. Proceedings of the 12th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Aix en Provence. 66-69.
Warren, Paul & William D. Marslen-Wilson. 1988. Cues to lexical choice: discriminating place and voice. Perception & Psychophysics, 43, 21-30.
Tyler, Lorraine.K. & Paul Warren. 1987. Local and global structure in spoken language comprehension. Journal of Memory and Language, 26, 638-657.
Warren, Paul & William D. Marslen-Wilson. 1987. Continuous uptake of acoustic cues in spoken word recognition. Perception & Psychophysics, 41, 262-275.
Chapters in books
Warren, Paul, Jen Hay, & Brynmor Thomas. 2007. The loci of sound change effects in recognition and perception. In J. Cole & J. I. Hualde (eds.) Laboratory Phonology 9. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, pp. 87-112
Warren, Paul, & Jen Hay. 2006. Using sound change to explore the mental lexicon. In C. Fletcher-Flinn & G. Haberman (eds.), Cognition and language: Perspectives from New Zealand. Bowen Hills, Queensland: Australian Academic Press, pp. 105-125.
Warren, Paul. 2006. Word recognition and sound merger. In J. Luchjenbroers (ed.), Cognitive Linguistic investigations across languages, fields, and philosophical boundaries. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 169-186.
Warren, Paul, & Nicola Daly. 2005. Characterizing New Zealand English intonation: broad and narrow analysis. In A. Bell, R. Harlow & D. Starks (eds.), Languages of New Zealand. Wellington: Victoria University Press, pp. 217-237.
Fletcher, Janet, Esther Grabe, & Paul Warren. 2005. Intonational variation in four dialects of English: the high rising tone. In Sun-Ah Jun (ed.) Prosodic Typology: The Phonology of Intonation and Phrasing. Oxford University Press, pp. 390-409.
Bauer, L. & Warren, P. 2004. New Zealand English phonology. In B. Kortmann, E.W. Schneider, K. Burridge, R. Mesthrie & C. Upton (eds.) A Handbook of Varieties of English: A Multimedia Reference Tool (vol. 1). Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, pp. 580-602.
Warren, P. & Daly, N. 2004. Characterizing New Zealand English intonation: broad and narrow analysis. In A. Bell, R. Harlow & D. Starks (eds.) Languages of New Zealand. Wellington: Victoria University Press.
Schafer, Amy J., Shari R. Speer and Paul Warren. 2004. Prosodic influences on the production and comprehension of syntactic ambiguity in a game-based conversation task. In J.C. Trueswell and M.K. Tanenhaus (eds.) Approaches to Studying World-Situated Language Use. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp. 209-225.
Warren, Paul and Laurie Bauer. 2004. Maori English: Phonology. In B. Kortmann, E.W. Schneider, K. Burridge, R. Mesthrie and C. Upton (eds.) A Handbook of Varieties of English: A Multimedia Reference Tool, Vol.1. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, pp. 614-624.
Warren, Paul & Nicola Daly. 2000. Sex as a factor in rises in New Zealand English. In Janet Holmes (ed.) Gendered speech in social context: perspectives from gown and town. Wellington: Victoria University Press, pp. 99-115.
Warren, Paul & David Britain. 2000. Prosody and intonation of New Zealand English. In Allan Bell & Konraad Kuiper (eds.) New Zealand English Wellington: Victoria University Press. Pp. 146-172.
Warren, Paul. 1999. Prosody and sentence processing. In Simon Garrod & Martin Pickering (eds.) Language Processing. Hove: Psychology Press. Pp. 155-188.
Grabe, Esther & Paul Warren. 1995. Stress shift: do speakers do it or do listeners hear it? In Bruce Connell & Amalia Arvaniti (eds.) Phonology and phonetic evidence: Papers in Laboratory Phonology IV. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp95-110.
Book reviews
Review of Y. Tohkura, E. Vatikiotis-Bateson, & Y.Sagisaka (1992, eds). Speech perception, production, and linguistic structure. In: Linguistics, Vol.31, No. 4, 1993, 762-3.
Review of G.T.M.Altmann (1990, ed.) Cognitive Models of Speech Processing. (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press). In: Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, Vol 46A(1), 1993, 182-4.
Other publications
Warren, Paul, Shari Speer and Amy Schafer. 2003. Wanna contraction and prosodic disambiguation in US and NZ English. Wellington Working Papers in Linguistics, 15, pp. 31-49.
Zwartz, Joel and Paul Warren. 2003. This is a statement? Lateness of rise as a factor in listener interpretation of HRTs. Wellington Working Papers in Linguistics, 15, pp. 51-62.
Bauer, Laurie and Paul Warren. 2002. Affix-able words: morphological productivity as the basis for (de)composition in processing. Wellington Working Papers in Linguistics, 14: 1-18.
Hay, Jen and Paul Warren. 2002. Experiments on /r/-intrusion. Wellington Working Papers in Linguistics, 14: 47-58.
Rae, Megan and Paul Warren. 2002. The assymetrical change in progress of NEAR and SQUARE vowels in NZE: Psycholinguistic evidence. Wellington Working Papers in Linguistics, 14: 33-46.
Published conference papers
Bauer, Laurie and Paul Warren. 2004. Curing the goat's mouth. In Steve Cassidy, Felicity Cox and Robert Mannell (eds.) Proceedings of the 10th Australian International Conference on Speech Science and Technology. Sydney: Macquarie University. Pp. 215-220.
Speer, Shari, Paul Warren and Amy Schafer. 2003. Intonation and sentence processing. In M.J. Solé, D. Recasens and J. Romero (eds.) Proceedings of the 15th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Barcelona 2003. Rundle Mall: Causal Productions. Pp. 95-105.
Warren, Paul, Megan Rae and Jen Hay. 2003. Word recognition and sound merger: The case of the front-centering dipthongs in NZ English. In M.J. Solé, D. Recasens and J. Romero (eds.) Proceedings of the 15th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Barcelona 2003. Rundle Mall: Causal Productions. Pp. 2989-2992.
Warren, P., Rae, M. and Hay, J. 2002. Goldilocks and the three beers: Word recognition and sound merger. In Catherine Bow (ed.) Proceedings 9th Australian International Conference on Speech Science and Technology. Melbourne: Australian Speech Science and Technology Association. Pp. 46-51.
Warren, Paul. 1997. Eye drops off shelf: sources and strategies in ambiguity resolution tasks. In Gus Habermann (ed.) Looking back and moving forward: 50 years of New Zealand Psychology. Proceedings of the 1997 Annual Conference of the New Zealand Psychological Society, Ch. 36, 280-288.
Speer, Shari R., Paul Warren, Amy J. Schafer, S. David White and Jenny Kneale. 1999. Situational constraints on the prosodic resolution of syntactic ambiguity. Proceedings of the 14th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, San Francisco. 1301-1304.
Warren, Paul.. Timing properties of New Zealand English rhythm. 1999. Proceedings of the 14th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, San Francisco. 1843-1848.
Conference presentations
Warren, Paul. 2004. On the front foot: The quality and quantity of ANZE vowels. Tenth Australian International Conference on Speech Science and Technology, Sydney, December.
Hay, Jen, Paul Warren, and Katie Drager. 2004. Sound change and the social indexing of lexical exemplars: Evidence from near the square. Language and Society Conference, Palmerston North, September.
Hay, Jen and Paul Warren. 2004. Sound change and spoken word recognition: Evidence from near the square. Linguistic Society of America Symposium on Modeling Sociophonetic Variation, Boston, MA, January.
Warren, Paul. 2003. (Why) do Kiwi women rise late? The phonetics and phonology of some Antipodean rising intonation contours. UK Language Variation and Change Conference, Sheffield, September.
Warren, Paul and Patricia Vermillion. 2003. Intonation in Language Varieties. Workshop at 15th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Barcelona, August.
Speer, Shari R., Amy J. Schafer and Paul Warren. 2003. A tutorial on intonation and sentence processing. Japanese Sentence Processing Workshop, Michigan, July.
Warren, Paul. 2002. Beer with me - consequences of dipthong merger on communication in NZE. 7th Language and Society Conference of the NZ Linguistics Society, Hamilton, November.
Warren, Paul & Nicola Daly. 2001. Did women rise later earlier? New Zealand Linguistic Society, Canterbury, August.
Schafer, A.J., Speer, S.R., Warren, P., & White, S.D. 2000 Prosodic influences on the production and comprehension of syntactic ambiguity in a game-based conversation task. Fourteenth Annual CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing, Philadelphia, PA, March.
Ainsworth, Helen & Paul Warren. 2000. Telling tales in Taranaki: Evidence of regional variation in New Zealand English. Workshop on the Analysis of Varieties of English prosody and intonation. Wellington, December.
Fletcher, Janet & Paul Warren. 2000. Variation in rises & rises in varieties. Workshop on the Analysis of Varieties of English prosody and intonation. Wellington, December.
Schafer, Amy J., Shari R. Speer & Paul Warren. 2000. Prosodic variability in disambiguations. Workshop on the Analysis of Varieties of English prosody and intonation. Wellington, December.
Schafer, Amy J., Paul Warren, Shari R. Speer, S. David White & Shari Sokol. 2000. Prosodic disambiguation in ambiguous and unambiguous situations. Linguistics Society of America. Chicago, January.
Speer, Shari R., Paul Warren, Amy J. Schafer & S. David White. 2000. Naive speakers prosodically resolve syntactic ambiguity in quasi-spontaneous dialogue. Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, New Orleans, LA, November.
Warren, Paul & Nicola Daly. 2000. Rising late in New Zealand: a study of tune-text alignment in NZE intonation. Australian Linguistics Society. Melbourne, July.
Warren, Paul, Shari R. Speer & Amy J. Schafer. 2000 Wanna-contraction and prosodic disambiguation in US and NZ English. Australian Linguistics Society. Melbourne, July.
Daly, Nicola and Paul Warren. 1999a. Pitching it differently in New Zealand English: some gender differences in intonation patterns. Paper presented at New Zealand Language and Gender Symposium, Wellington, October 1999.
Daly, Nicola and Paul Warren. 1999b. Tune-text alignment and gender differences in NZE intonation. Paper presented at the Thirteenth Linguistics Conference of the Linguistic Society of New Zealand, Massey University, Palmerston North, November 1999.
Speer, Shari R., Amy J. Schafer and Paul Warren. 1999.Prosodic disambiguation in naïve speakers’ production of temporary syntactic ambiguity. Paper presented at USC Language Production conference, November 1999.
Speer, Shari R., Shari B. Sokol, Amy J. Schafer, and Paul Warren. 1999.Prosodic disambiguation of syntactic ambiguity in discourse context. Paper presented to the Acoustical Society of America.
Speer, Shari R., Paul Warren & Amy J. Schafer. 1999. Intonational disambiguation in sentence production. Presentation at the meeting of the Linguistics Society of America, Los Angeles, January 1999.
Warren, Paul & Lisa Camasi. 1999. Literally sexist language? Paper presented at New Zealand Language and Gender Symposium, Wellington, October 1999.
Warren, Paul, Shari R. Speer, Amy J. Schafer and S. David White. 1999. Prosodic disambiguation — syntax and situational constraints. Paper presented at the Thirteenth Linguistics Conference of the Linguistic Society of New Zealand, Massey University, Palmerston North, November 1999.
