1. Peter W. Jusczyk: Toward a Model of the Development of Speech Perception 2. Charles A. Ferguson: Discovering Sound Units and Constructing Sound Systems: It's Child's Play 3. Michael Studdert-Kennedy: Sources of Variability in Early Speech Development 4. Philip Lieberman: On the Genetic Basis of Linguistic Variation 5. Mats Blomberg, Rolf Carlson, Kjell Elenius, and Bjorn Granstrom: Auditory Models as Front Ends in Speech Recognition Systems 6. Carol A. Fowler and Mary R. Smith: Speech Perception as Vector Analysis: An Approach to the Problem of In variance and Segmentation 7. Louis C. W. Pols: Variation and Interaction in Speech 8. Bertrand Delgutte: Analysis of French Stop Consonants Using a Model of the Peripheral Auditory System 9. Shiela E. Blumstein: On Acoustic Invariance in Speech 10. James H. Abbs: Invariance and Variability in Speech Production: A Distinction Between Linguistic Intent and Its Neuromotor Implementation 11. Osamu Fujimura: Relative lnvariance of Articulatory Movements: An Iceberg Model 12 Tuller, and J. A. Scott Kelso: Temporal lnvariance in the Production of Speech 13. Klaus J. Kohler: Invariance and Variability in Speech Timing: From Utterance to Segment 14. Dennis Klatt: Problem of Variability in S11eech Recognition and in Models of Speech Perception 15. Ronald Cole, Richard M. Stern and Moshe J. Lasry: Performing Fine Phonetic Distinctions: Templates versus Features16. John N. Holmes: Normalization and Vowel Perception17. Jeffrey Elman, and John McClelland: Exploiting Lawful Variability in the Speech Wave 22. Gunnar Fant: Features-Fiction and Facts 23. Bjorn Lindblom: On the Origin and Purpose of Discreteness and lnvariance in Sound Patterns 24. Antonie Cohen: Invariance and Variability of Words in the Speech Chain 25. Robert F. Port: In variance in Phonetics
Joseph S. Perkell and Dennis H. Klatt, both Massachusetts Institute of Technology