Publications
Stanford, James N. 2016. Sociotonetics using connected speech. A study of Sui tone variation in free-speech style. Asia-Pacific Language Variation 2 (1) : 48–82. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Haslam, Nick, Steve Loughnan and Pamela Sun. 2011. Beastly: What Makes Animal Metaphors Offensive? Journal of Language and Social Psychology 30 (3) : 311–325. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Markman, Ellen M. and W. Quin Yow. 2011. Bilingualism and children's use of paralinguistic cues to interpret emotion in speech. Bilingualism 14 (1) : 562–569. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Voyer, Daniel and Cheryl Techentin. 2010. Subjective Auditory Features of Sarcasm. Metaphor and Symbol 25 (4) : 227–242. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Lim, Lisa. 2009. Revisiting English prosody: (Some) New Englishes as tone languages? English World-Wide 30 (2) : 218–239. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Dimitrova, Daniela V. and Colleen Connolly-Ahern. 2007. A Tale of Two Wars: Framing Analysis of Online News Sites in Coalition Countries and the Arab World during the Iraq War. Howard Journal of Communication 18 (2) : 153–168. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Price, Cathy J., David Green and Jenny Crinion. 2007. Exploring cross-linguistic vocabulary effects on brain structures using voxel-based morphometry. Bilingualism 10 (2) : 189–199. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Wang, Yue and Joan A. Sereno. 2007. Behavioral and cortical effects of learning a second language: The acquisition of tone. In Munro, Murray J. and Ocke-Schwen Bohn, eds. Language Experience in Second Language Speech Learning: In honor of James Emil Flege. (Language Learning & Language Teaching 17). John Benjamins. pp. 239–258. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Fox Tree, Jean E. and Gregory E. Bryant. 2005. Is there an Ironic Tone of Voice? Language and Speech 48 (3) : 257–277. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Rice, Keren and Sharon Hargus, eds. 2005. Athabaskan Prosody. (Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 269). John Benjamins. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Warren, Martin and Winnie Cheng. 2005. //CAN i help you //: The use of rise and rise-fall tones in the Hong Kong Corpus of Spoken English. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 10 (1) : 85–107. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Wayland, Ratree and Susan G. Guion. 2004. Training English and Chinese Listeners to Perceive Thai Tones: A Preliminary Report. Language Learning 54 (4) : 681–712. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Laplante, Debi and Nalini Ambady. 2003. On How Things Are Said: Voice Tone, Voice Intensity, Verbal Content, and Perceptions of Politeness. Journal of Language and Social Psychology 22 (4) : 434–441. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Bauer, Robert S., Cheung Kwan-hin and Cheung Pak-man. 2003. Variation and merger of the rising tones in Hong Kong Cantonese. Language Variation and Change 15 (2) : 211–225. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Gaston, Jeremy, John W. Mullennix, Tressa Bihon, Jodie Bricklemyer and Jessica M. Keener. 2002. Effects of Variation in Emotional Tone of Voice on Speech Perception. Language and Speech 45 : 255–283. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)