Contents : J. Almberg: The circumflex tone in a Norwegian dialect - E.L. Asu/F. Nolan: The interaction of intonation and quantity in Estonian: an analysis of nuclear falls in statements and questions - G. Bruce: Secondary stress and pitch accent synchronization in Swedish - W.A. v. Dommelen/T. Fretheim: Prosodic cues in the pragmatic interpretation of postposed conditional clauses in Norwegian - T. Fretheim: The interaction of right-dislocated pronominals and intonational phrasing in Norwegian - B. Granström/D. House/J. Beskow/M. Lundeberg: Verbal and visual prosody in multimodal speech perception - P. Hansson: The effect of individual words' information status on accentuation - M. Heldner: On the non-linear lengthening of focally accented Swedish words - T. Hokkanen: Prosody of self-initiated repairs of naturally occuring speech errors - D. House: Focal accent in Swedish: perception of rise properties for Accent 1 - A. Iivonen: Intonation of Finnish questions - D. Krull: Perception of Estonian word prosody in wispered speech - S. Lattner/B. Maess/Y. Wang/A.D. Friederici/K. Alter: Human auditory processing of pitch-altered speech - R.A. Nilsen: "Borderline Cases". Tonal characteristics of some varieties of spoken South Norwegian - F. Nolan/H. Jónsdóttir: Accentuation patterns in Icelandic - M. Segerup: Segmental duration - an essential feature of the West Swedish dialect - A.H. Teig: Can phonetically high pitch represent phonologically low tone? Evidence from East Norwegian raised background domains - S. Werner/M. Vainio: Modeling Finnish intonation for TTS - E. Zetterholm: The role of prosody in voice imitation.
The Editors: Wim A. van Dommelen is professor of Phonetics at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway. Thorstein Fretheim is professor of Linguistics at the same university.