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PAPERS & PRESENTATIONS

[abstract] Kettig, Thomas, and Lisa Davidson. Acoustic correlates of stress in contrastive short and long vowels in ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi. LabPhon19. Seoul, Korea, 27–29 June.

[slides] Kettig, Thomas, and Lisa Davidson. 2024. Acoustic correlates distinguish multiple levels of stress in ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi. 100th Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America. New York, NY, 5 January.
 

[link] Coretta, Stefano, Joseph Casillas, … Thomas Kettig, … Timo Roettger. 2023. Multidimensional signals and analytic flexibility: Estimating degrees of freedom in human speech analyses. Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science.

[slides] Kettig, Thomas. 2023. Inter- and intra-speaker /ai~ei/ variation in ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi. Acoustic and historical-comparative evidence. NWAV 51, New York, NY, 14 October.

[link] [slides] Kettig, Thomas. 2023. Word class and frequency effects in Hawaiian stressed vowel clusters. International Congress of Phonetic Sciences 2023. Prague, Czechia, 9 August.

[slides] Kettig, Thomas. 2022. Word class and diphthong reduction in ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi. NWAV 50, San Jose, CA, USA, 14 October.

[link] [slides] Hughes, Vincent, Carmen Llamas, and Thomas Kettig. 2022. Legal context biases listeners toward hearing voice pairs as more similarNWAV 50, San Jose, CA, USA, 14 October.

[link] Hughes, Vincent, Carmen Llamas, and Thomas Kettig. 2022. Eliciting and evaluating likelihood ratios for speaker recognition by human listeners under forensically realistic channel-mismatched conditions. Proceedings of Interspeech. Incheon, Korea.

[link] Hughes, Vincent, Carmen Llamas, and Thomas Kettig. 2002. A game-based approach to eliciting and evaluating likelihood ratios for speaker recognition. 30th Annual Conference of the International Association for Forensic Phonetics and Acoustics. Prague, Czechia, 10-13 July.

[link] Barreda, Santiago, Thomas Kettig, and Chaya Nove. 2021. Workshop: Improving vowel formant analysis in sociophonetic research using Fast Track. NWAV 49. Online, 19 October.

[link] Kettig, Thomas. 2021. Nānā i ke kumu: Acoustic phonetic research on archival recordings of ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi. International Conference on Language Documentation and Conservation 7. Online.

[link] Kettig, Thomas. 2021. Haʻina ʻia mai ana ka puana: The vowels of ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi. PhD Dissertation, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa.

[link] Drager, Katie and Thomas Kettig. 2021. Trends in Sociophonetics. In R.-A. Knight and J. Setter (eds), Cambridge Handbook of Phonetics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 551-577.

[link] [poster] Kettig, Thomas. 2019. Spectral coarticulation in Hawaiian /aV/ and /aCV/ sequences. International Congress of Phonetic Sciences 2019. Melbourne, Australia, 8 August. (Poster)

[link] Kettig, Thomas and Katie Drager. 2018. The social evaluation of TRAP-backing in Montreal. Sociolinguistics Symposium 22. Auckland, New Zealand, 30 June.

[link] Kettig, Thomas. 2017. “Now say ‘Ah’: Internal factors of shifting and the English low vowel space.” E. Louviot & C. Delesse (eds), Studies in Language Variation and Change 2 Shifting, Switching and Alternating Patterns in the History of English. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

[link] Kettig, Thomas. 2017. “Diachronically stable, lexically specific variation: The phonological representation of secondary /æ/-lengthening”. Phonetics and Phonology in Europe. Cologne, Germany, 12-14 June. (Poster)

[link] Kettig, Thomas and Bodo Winter. 2017. “Producing and Perceiving the Canadian Vowel Shift: Evidence from a Montreal Community.” Language Variation and Change 29(1): 79–100. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954394517000023.

[link] Kettig, Thomas. 2017. “One hundred years of stability: The case of the BAD-LAD split”. 91st Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America. Austin, TX, 6 January. (Poster)

[link] Kettig, Thomas, Sarah Turner, Đinh Thị Diệu and Phạm Văn Cự. 2016. “State Livelihood Planning and Legibility in Vietnam’s Northern Borderlands: The ‘Rightful Criticisms’ of Local Officials.” Journal of Contemporary Asia 46(1): 42–70. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00472336.2015.1028964.

[link] Kettig, Thomas. 2016. “Preaspiration following /æ/ in Southern Standard British English.” Sociolinguistics Symposium 21. Murcia, Spain, 15–18 June.

[link] [extended abstract] Kettig, Thomas. 2016. “The BAD-LAD split: Secondary /æ/-lengthening in Southern Standard British English” (Poster). 90th Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America. Washington, DC, 8 January. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v1i0.3732.

[link] Kettig, Thomas. The BAD-LAD Split: A Phonetic Investigation. Masters Thesis, University of Cambridge.

[link] Kettig, Thomas and Bodo Winter. 2015. “The Canadian Vowel Shift in Production and Perception: New Evidence from Montreal.” NWAV44: Intersections. Toronto, ON, 22-25 October 2015.

[link] Kettig, Thomas. 2015. “Now say ‘Ah’: Internal factors of shifting and the English low vowel space.” 4th Biennial Conference on the Diachrony of English. Troyes, France, 6 July.

[link] [extended abstract] Kettig, Thomas and Bodo Winter. 2015. “Production and Perception Asymmetries in the Canadian Vowel Shift.” 6th International Conference on Experimental Linguistics. Athens, Greece, 26 June.

[link] Kettig, Thomas. 2015. “Changing Accents, Changing Vowels.” St Edmund’s Interdisciplinary Conference. St Edmund’s College, Cambridge, UK, 19 February.

[link] Kettig, Thomas. 2014. “Gussing Rondomly: How Canadians are advancing, spreading, and perceiving an active vowel shift.” Sociolinguistics Symposium 20. Jyväskylä, Finland, 18 June.

[link] Kettig, Thomas. 2014. The Canadian Short Vowels in Motion: Real-time Change and Regional Diffusion. 2014 Annual Meeting of the American Dialect Society. Minneapolis, MN, 2 January.

[link] [extended abstract] Kettig, Thomas. 2014. “The Canadian Shift: Its Acoustic Trajectory and Consequences for Vowel Categorization.” 88th Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America. Minneapolis, MN, 4 January. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3765/exabs.v0i0.2386.

[link] Kettig, Thomas. 2013. “Production and Perception of Short Vowels in Montréal.” McGill Canadian Conference for Linguistics Undergraduates. Montréal, QC, 18 March.

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