William J. Barry

William J. Barry
Born 1943
Ireland
Alma mater University of Kiel
Known for Study of phonetics, speech technology
Scientific career
Fields Phonetics
Institutions Saarland University

William John Barry (born 1943 in Ireland) is one of the leading phoneticians in Germany. He came to Germany in his early years and was mainly educated at the University of Kiel by the renowned German phonetician Klaus J. Kohler. In 1992 he was appointed to the Chair of Phonetics at Saarland University. His principal research areas were speech synthesis, rhythm and segmental structures, the application of linguistics to questions of pronunciation learning, speech-language pathology and speech technology in general.

William J. Barry's innovative and productive research and his close cooperation with the Institute of Computational Linguistics at Saarland University as well as with the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (also Saarbruecken) made the Saarbruecken Institute of Phonetics an outstanding pillar of science in Europe. In 2007, W. J. Barry held the chair at the 16th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences (ICPhS).[1] He became an emeritus professor in 2008.

Barry is currently a Council Member of the International Phonetic Association[2] and editor of PHONUS journal.[3]

Selected works

Most of his publications resulted from the cooperation with other researchers:

  • 2008: "Do we need a symbol for a central open vowel?" Journal of the International Phonetic Association 38 No. 3, 2008, 349-357.
  • 2007: Rhythm as an L2 problem: How prosodic is it?
  • 2006: Strength of British English accents in altered listening conditions
  • 2005: Phonetic knowledge in speech technology - and phonetic knowledge from speech technology (Springer Verlag)
  • 2004: Methodische Aspekte der auditiven Bewertung von Stimmqualität
  • 2004: Interaction between segmental structure and rhythm. A look at Italian dialects and regional standard Italian
  • 2003: Do Rhythm Measures Tell us Anything about Language Type?
  • 2002: The Phonetics and Phonology of English Pronunciation (Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier)
  • 2002: Differential weighting of phonetic properties in cross-dialectal perception
  • 2001: Must diphone synthesis be so unnatural?
  • 2001: Cross-language Similarities and Differences in Spontaneous Speech Patterns
  • 2000: The prosody of excitement in horse race commentaries
  • 1999: Soziophonetische Betrachtungen zu deutschen Dialekten in Lothringen (Frankreich) Folia Linguistica XXXII, 3-4, 1999, 161-199
  • 1999: Trends und Ergebnisse der phonetischen Forschung und ihr Nutzen für den Fremdsprachenunterricht
  • 1998: Time as a factor in the acoustic variation of schwa.'
  • 1998: Implications of energy declination for speech synthesis.
  • 1997: Another R-tickle Journal of the International Phonetics Association 27 (1 & 2), 1997, 35-45.
  • 1996: Some fundamental problems of looking at connected speech
  • 1996: The relevance of phonetics for pronunciation teaching
  • 1995: Schwa vs. schwa + /r/ in German
  • 1979: "Time" in the Production and Perception of Speech (with Klaus J. Kohler)[4]

References

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