Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format
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Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format
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Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format Example of Journal of the International Phonetic Association format
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open access Open Access

Journal of the International Phonetic Association — Template for authors

Categories Rank Trend in last 3 yrs
Language and Linguistics #154 of 879 down down by 25 ranks
Linguistics and Language #172 of 935 down down by 28 ranks
Anthropology #86 of 411 up up by 11 ranks
Speech and Hearing #36 of 60 down down by 1 rank
journal-quality-icon Journal quality:
High
calendar-icon Last 4 years overview: 77 Published Papers | 126 Citations
indexed-in-icon Indexed in: Scopus
last-updated-icon Last updated: 13/06/2020
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Journal Performance & Insights

CiteRatio

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR)

Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP)

A measure of average citations received per peer-reviewed paper published in the journal.

Measures weighted citations received by the journal. Citation weighting depends on the categories and prestige of the citing journal.

Measures actual citations received relative to citations expected for the journal's category.

1.6

45% from 2019

CiteRatio for Journal of the International Phonetic Association from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 1.6
2019 1.1
2018 1.2
2017 1.4
2016 1.7
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

0.405

11% from 2019

SJR for Journal of the International Phonetic Association from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 0.405
2019 0.455
2018 0.326
2017 0.27
2016 0.462
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

1.073

24% from 2019

SNIP for Journal of the International Phonetic Association from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 1.073
2019 0.864
2018 0.732
2017 1.123
2016 1.752
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

insights Insights

  • CiteRatio of this journal has increased by 45% in last years.
  • This journal’s CiteRatio is in the top 10 percentile category.

insights Insights

  • SJR of this journal has decreased by 11% in last years.
  • This journal’s SJR is in the top 10 percentile category.

insights Insights

  • SNIP of this journal has increased by 24% in last years.
  • This journal’s SNIP is in the top 10 percentile category.
Journal of the International Phonetic Association

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Cambridge University Press

Journal of the International Phonetic Association

The Journal of the International Phonetic Association (JIPA) is a forum for work in the fields of phonetic theory and description. As well as including papers on laboratory phonetics/phonology and related topics, the journal encourages submissions on practical applications of ...... Read More

Language and Linguistics

Linguistics and Language

Anthropology

Speech and Hearing

Arts and Humanities

i
Last updated on
13 Jun 2020
i
ISSN
0025-1003
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Impact Factor
High - 1.02
i
Open Access
No
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Sherpa RoMEO Archiving Policy
Green faq
i
Plagiarism Check
Available via Turnitin
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Endnote Style
Download Available
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Bibliography Name
unsrt
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Citation Type
Numbered
[25]
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Bibliography Example
G E Blonder, M Tinkham, and T M Klapwijk. Transition from metallic to tunneling regimes in superconducting microconstrictions: Excess current, charge imbalance, and supercurrent conversion. Phys. Rev. B, 25(7):4515–4532, 1982. 10.1103/PhysRevB.25.4515.

Top papers written in this journal

Journal Article DOI: 10.1017/S0025100301001128
To ‘errrr’ is human: ecology and acoustics of speech disfluencies
Elizabeth Shriberg1

Abstract:

Unlike read or laboratory speech, spontaneous speech contains high rates of disuencies (e.g. repetitions, repairs, ®lled pauses, false starts). This paper aims to promotedisuency awareness' especially in the ®eld of phonetics ± which has much to offer in the way of increasing our understanding of these phenomena. Two broad cl... Unlike read or laboratory speech, spontaneous speech contains high rates of disuencies (e.g. repetitions, repairs, ®lled pauses, false starts). This paper aims to promotedisuency awareness' especially in the ®eld of phonetics ± which has much to offer in the way of increasing our understanding of these phenomena. Two broad claims are made, based on analyses of disuencies in different corpora of spontaneous American English speech. First, an Ecology Claim suggests that disuencies are related to aspects of the speaking environments in which they arise. The claim is supported by evidence from task effects, location analyses, speaker effects and sociolinguistic effects. Second, an Acoustics Claim argues that disuency has consequences for phonetic and prosodic aspects of speech that are not represented in the speech patterns of laboratory speech. Such effects include modi®cations in segment durations, intonation, voice quality, vowel quality and coarticulation patterns. The ecological and acoustic evidence provide insights about human language production in real-world contexts. Such evidence can also guide methods for the processing of spontaneous speech in automatic speech recognition applications. read more read less

Topics:

Speech corpus (68%)68% related to the paper, Speech error (64%)64% related to the paper, Speech production (63%)63% related to the paper, Motor theory of speech perception (63%)63% related to the paper, Intelligibility (communication) (63%)63% related to the paper
240 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.1017/S0025100300005417
The Formants of Monophthong Vowels in Standard Southern British English Pronunciation
David Deterding1

Abstract:

The formants of the eleven monophthong vowels of Standard Southern British (SSB) pronunciation of English were measured for five male and five female BBC broadcasters whose speech was included in the MARSEC database. The measurements were made using linear-prediction-based formant tracks overlaid on digital spectrograms for a... The formants of the eleven monophthong vowels of Standard Southern British (SSB) pronunciation of English were measured for five male and five female BBC broadcasters whose speech was included in the MARSEC database. The measurements were made using linear-prediction-based formant tracks overlaid on digital spectrograms for an average of ten instances of each vowel for each speakers, These measurements were taken from connected speech, allowing comparison with previous formant values measured from citation words. I was found that the male vowels were significantly less peripheral in the measurements from connected speech than in measurements from citation words. read more read less

Topics:

Monophthong (64%)64% related to the paper, Vowel (60%)60% related to the paper, Formant (59%)59% related to the paper, Connected speech (55%)55% related to the paper, Pronunciation (52%)52% related to the paper
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220 Citations
open accessOpen access Journal Article DOI: 10.1017/S0025100302001020
A cross-linguistic acoustic study of voiceless fricatives
Matthew Gordon1, Paul Barthmaier1, Kathy Sands1

Abstract:

Results of an acoustic study of voiceless fricatives in seven languages are presented. Three measurements were taken: duration, center of gravity, and overall spectral shape. In addition, formant transitions from adjacent vowels were measured for a subset of the fricatives in certain languages. Fricatives were well differenti... Results of an acoustic study of voiceless fricatives in seven languages are presented. Three measurements were taken: duration, center of gravity, and overall spectral shape. In addition, formant transitions from adjacent vowels were measured for a subset of the fricatives in certain languages. Fricatives were well differentiated in terms of overall spectral shape and their co-articulation effects on formant transitions for adjacent vowels. The center of gravity measurement also proved useful in differentiating certain fricatives. Duration generally was less useful in differentiating the fricatives. In general, results were consistent across speakers and languages, with lateral fricatives displaying the greatest interlanguage variation in their acoustic properties and /s/ providing the greatest source of interspeaker variation. read more read less

Topics:

Formant (56%)56% related to the paper, Acoustic phonetics (53%)53% related to the paper
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188 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.1017/S0025100305002124
Formant frequencies of RP monophthongs in four age groups of speakers
Sarah Hawkins1, Jonathan Midgley1

Abstract:

This study describes the frequencies of the first two formants of monophthongs produced by male RP speakers in four age groups: aged 20–25, 35–40, 50–55, and 65–73 years in 2001. The eleven monophthongs were spoken in /hVd/ contexts by five men in each age group. The eleven words, together with nineteen filler words chosen to... This study describes the frequencies of the first two formants of monophthongs produced by male RP speakers in four age groups: aged 20–25, 35–40, 50–55, and 65–73 years in 2001. The eleven monophthongs were spoken in /hVd/ contexts by five men in each age group. The eleven words, together with nineteen filler words chosen to distract attention from the purpose of the experiment, were randomized four times and read by each speaker in citation form, for a total of 880 items. F1 and F2 frequencies were measured in Hz and ERB-rate. As expected, in younger compared with older speakers, F1 is higher in /e/ and especially /ae/, and F2 is higher in /u:/ and /υ/. Other vowels varied in overall dispersion of F1 or F2, but no other differences between age groups were observed. There is evidence that the oldest age group to show change in a vowel's quality has particularly large differences between individuals, so that, collectively, members of that group span much of the quality range from ‘conservative’ (older groups) to ‘progressive’ (younger groups). Such so-called ‘break groups’ have implications for theoretical explanations of sound change. read more read less
183 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.1017/S0025100301001116
Turn transition, creak and glottal stop in Finnish talk-in-interaction
Richard Ogden1

Abstract:

Finnish talk-in-interaction is shown to use creak and glottal stops distinctively. Creak has turn-yielding functions, and glottal stops have turn-holding functions. Rather than either intuition or the use of large corpora with no attention to the interactional function in which the talk is embedded, the methodology used is th... Finnish talk-in-interaction is shown to use creak and glottal stops distinctively. Creak has turn-yielding functions, and glottal stops have turn-holding functions. Rather than either intuition or the use of large corpora with no attention to the interactional function in which the talk is embedded, the methodology used is that of interactional linguistics (e.g. Couper-Kuhlen & Selting 1996 for a prosodic approach), which places emphasis on demonstrating participants' local orientation to linguistic categories within interactional sequences. read more read less

Topics:

Glottal stop (59%)59% related to the paper, Interactional linguistics (59%)59% related to the paper
165 Citations
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13. What is Sherpa RoMEO Archiving Policy for Journal of the International Phonetic Association?

SHERPA/RoMEO Database

We extracted this data from Sherpa Romeo to help researchers understand the access level of this journal in accordance with the Sherpa Romeo Archiving Policy for Journal of the International Phonetic Association. The table below indicates the level of access a journal has as per Sherpa Romeo's archiving policy.

RoMEO Colour Archiving policy
Green Can archive pre-print and post-print or publisher's version/PDF
Blue Can archive post-print (ie final draft post-refereeing) or publisher's version/PDF
Yellow Can archive pre-print (ie pre-refereeing)
White Archiving not formally supported
FYI:
  1. Pre-prints as being the version of the paper before peer review and
  2. Post-prints as being the version of the paper after peer-review, with revisions having been made.

14. What are the most common citation types In Journal of the International Phonetic Association?

The 5 most common citation types in order of usage for Journal of the International Phonetic Association are:.

S. No. Citation Style Type
1. Author Year
2. Numbered
3. Numbered (Superscripted)
4. Author Year (Cited Pages)
5. Footnote

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Yes, SciSpace provides this functionality. After signing up, you would need to import your existing references from Word or Bib file to SciSpace. Then SciSpace would allow you to download your references in Journal of the International Phonetic Association Endnote style according to Elsevier guidelines.

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