Patricia Keating
Patricia Keating is a professor in the Linguistics Department at UCLA. She received her PhD in Linguistics at Brown University in 1980. She is a noted phonetician, and is the director of the UCLA Phonetics Laboratory. She is also a founding member of the Association for Laboratory Phonology[1] and the current (from 2015) president of the International Phonetic Association.[2][3]
Keating is best known for two areas of research in phonetics.[4] She is, with Cécile Fougeron, the discoverer of the initial strengthening effect, wherein consonants receive more fortis articulations (greater degree of articulatory contact) to the extent that they occur at the beginnings of high-ranking phonological phrases.[5] On the theoretical side, she is the inventor of the "window model" of coarticulation,[6] a theory of phonetic realization that specifies a particular range of legal values for each segment along each phonetic parameter.[7]
Keating is married to linguist Bruce Hayes.
Notes
- ↑ "Association for Laboratory Phonology : Home". www.labphon.org. Retrieved 2017-07-24.
- ↑ "History of the IPA | International Phonetic Association". www.internationalphoneticassociation.org. Retrieved 2017-07-24.
- ↑ Linguistics, UCLA (2015-07-29). "Pat Keating elected next president of the International Phonetic Association". UCLA Linguistics Blog. Retrieved 2017-07-24.
- ↑ "Citation index Patricia Keating". Google scholar. 23 July 2017.
- ↑ Fougeron and Keating (1997)
- ↑ Farnetani & Recasens (2010). "Coarticulation and connected speech". Handbook of the Phonetic Sciences.
- ↑ Keating (1990)
Selected Publications
- Fougeron, Cecile and Patricia Keating (1997) Articulatory strengthening at edges of prosodic domains. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 101: 3728-3740.
- Keating, Patricia A. (1990) The window model of coarticulation : articulatory evidence . In Papers in laboratory phonology I (John Kingston & Mary E. Beckman, eds.). Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 451–470.