CHOMSKY, N., and HALLE, M. (1968). The Sound Pattern of English.New York: Harper & Row.
2.
HIXON, T., MEAD, J., and GOLDMAN, M. (1976). Dynamics of the chest wall during speech production: Function of the thorax, rib cage, diaphragm, and abdomen. Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 19, 297–356.
3.
HOLMBERG, E., HILLMAN, R., and PERKELL, J. (1988). Glottal airflow and transglottal pressure measurements for male and female speakers in soft, normal, and loud voice. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 84, 511–529.
4.
JAKODSON, R., FANT, G., and HALLE, M. (1951/1965). Preliminaries to Speech AnalysisCambridge, MA: MIT Press.
5.
JOOS, M. (1948). Acoustic Phonetics. Language Monographs, 23, 1–136.
6.
KAISER, L. (1952). Professor R.H. Stetson and Motor Phonetics revised. Lingua, 3, 227–229.
7.
KELSO, J.A.S., SALTZMAN, E., and TULLER, B. (1986). The dynamical perspective on speech production: Data and theory. Journal of Phonetics, 14, 29–59.
8.
LADEFOGED, P. (1967). Three Areas of Experimental Phonetics.London: Oxford University Press.
9.
LEANDERSON, R., SUNDBERG, J., and VON EULER, C. (1987). The role of diaphragmatic activity during singing. A study of transdiaphragmatic pressures. Journal of Applied Physiology, 62, 259–270.
10.
LILJENCRANTS, J., and LINDBLOM, B. (1972). Numerical simulation of vowel quality systems: The role of perceptual contrast. Language, 48, 839–862.
11.
LISKER, L., and ABRAMSON, A. (1971). Distinctive features and laryngeal control. Language, 47, 767–785.
12.
LÖFQVIST, A. (1986). Stability and change. Journal of Phonetics, 14, 139–144.
13.
MILLER, G.A. (1952). Review of Motor Phonetics, A Study of Speech Movements in Action. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 24, 329.
14.
MUNHALL, K. (1985). An examination of intra-articulator relative timing. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 78, 1548–1553.
15.
MUNHALL, K., and LÖFQVIST, A. (1988). Gestural aggregation in speech. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 84, S82(A).
16.
NITTROUER, S., MUNHALL, K., KELSO, J.A.S., TULLER, B., and HARRIS, K.S. (1988). Patterns of interarticulator phasing and their relation to linguistic structure. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 84, 1653–1661.
17.
OHALA, J. (1983). The origin of sound patterns in vocal tract constraints. In P. MacNeilage (ed.), The Production of Speech (pp. 187–216). New York: Springer.
18.
POTTER, R., KOPP, G., and GREEN, H. (1947). Visible Speech.New York: Van Nostrand.
19.
SOCK, R., OLLILA, L., DELATTRE, C., ZILLIOX, C., and ZOHAIR, L. (1988). Patrons de phases dans le cycle acoustique de détente en français. Journal Acoustique, 1, 339–345.
20.
STEVENS, K. (1972). The quantal theory of speech: Evidence from articulatory-acoustic data. In E. David and P. Denes (eds.), Human Communication: A Unified View (pp. 51–66). New York: McGraw-Hill.
21.
STEVENS, K. (1983). Design features of speech sound systems. In P. MacNeilage (ed.), The Production of Speech (pp. 247–261). New York: Springer.
22.
TULLER, B., and KELSO, J.A.S. (1984). The timing of articulatory gestures: Evidence for relational invariants. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 76, 1534–1543.
23.
TWADDELL, W.F. (1953). Stetson's model and the ‘supra-segmental phonemes’. Language, 29, 415–453.