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Fengyue (Lisa) Zhao presents at BSMCS 2025

Phonetics Lab Ph.D. candidate Fengyue (Lisa) Zhao presented her ongoing research at BSMCS 2025 (the 5th Biennial Boston Speech Motor Control Symposium), held in Boston, Massachusetts from June 12 to June 13, 2025. 

Fengyue (Lisa) presented  research she conducted with Dr. Sam Tilsen - the paper title was:  "Unpredictable Temporal Auditory Feedback Perturbation Induces Lengthening, Not Compensation"

26th August 2025

Chloe Kwon & Fengyue (Lisa) Zhao present at Interspeech 2025

Phonetics Lab Ph.D. candidates Chloe Kwon and Fengyue (Lisa) Zhao presented their ongoing research at Interspeech 2025, held in Rotterdam, The Netherlands from August 17 to August 21, 2025.

 

Chloe Kwon presented her paper entitled “Speaker-specific Patterns of Phonetic Covariation in Korean Word-medial Stops and the Role of Phonological and Morphological Contexts”. The paper can be found here: https://www.isca-archive.org/interspeech_2025/kwon25b_interspeech.html.

 

Fengyue (Lisa) presented a paper on research she conducted with Dr. Jennifer Kuo - the paper was titled:  "The Role of Contextual Variation in Learning Cantonese Tones from Naturalistic Speech". The paper can be found here: https://www.isca-archive.org/interspeech_2025/zhao25j_interspeech.html.

 

 

26th August 2025

Phonetics Lab Ph.D. candidate Yao Zhang completes second round of field research on the Chinese Yi language

This Summer Phonetics Lab Ph.D. candidate Yao Zhang  conducted her second round of fieldwork in China's Sichuan and Yunnan provinces, where she worked with native speakers of the Yi language.

 

The Yi language is Tibeto-Burmese language that shares the same linguistic ancestor as modern Chinese.  Spoken only in China, Yi is no longer linguistically related to any Mandarin dialect, and Yao has been studying how Yi interacts with local Mandarin. 

 

Yao's research focused on tone systems and the loanword adaptations in different Yi dialects, and her fieldwork gathered language recordings from native Yi speakers.  A preliminary phonetic analysis of those recordings shows that: 

 

-Tone adaptation patterns in Nuosu Yi vary with speakers' bilingual proficiency, which correlates strongly with generation and education level.
-Older speakers in their 60s produced patterns that align with those generalized from corpus data
-Younger speakers in their 20s showed a marked preference for the innovative use of the derivative tone 4

 

This generational contrast highlights how language contact and bilingualism shape phonological adaptation in contemporary Yi communities, pointing to the need for further investigation and documentation.

22nd August 2025

John Starr Wins a Provost Diversity Fellowship & a Russell Family Teaching Award

Congratulations to Phonetics Lab graduate student John Starr, who was awarded both a Fellowship and a Teaching Award! 

 

John was awarded a Provost Diversity Fellowship for Advanced Doctoral Students from the Cornell Graduate School.  This fellowship is a competitive one‐term dissertation completion fellowship awarded to advanced Ph.D. students who have made significant contributions to Cornell’s core value to provide a community of inclusion, belonging, and respect.
 

 

In addition, John's excellent teaching performance resulted in a Cornell College of Arts & Sciences Russell Family Teaching Award. Recipients of this award have demonstrated their devotion to teaching, including classroom presence, course preparation and administration, student counseling, development of new courses, and new methods of student instruction.

20th August 2025