Patricia Keating

Patricia Ann Keating (born July 20, 1952)[1] is an American linguist and noted phonetician. She received her PhD in Linguistics at Brown University in 1980.[2] Since 1980 she has been on the faculty of the Linguistics Department at University of California, Los Angeles. She became a Full Professor and director of the UCLA Phonetics Laboratory in 1991.[3]

Keating is best known for two areas of research in phonetics.[4] She is, with Cécile Fougeron, the discoverer of the initial strengthening effect, wherein consonants receive more fortis articulations (greater degree of articulatory contact) to the extent that they occur at the beginnings of high-ranking phonological phrases. On the theoretical side, she is the inventor of the "window model" of coarticulation,[5] a theory of phonetic realization that specifies a particular range of legal values for each segment along each phonetic parameter.

Keating is a founding member of the Association for Laboratory Phonology[6] and was President of the International Phonetic Association from 2015 to 2019.[7][8]

Keating is married to linguist Bruce Hayes.

Selected publications

  • Fougeron, Cécile and Keating, Patricia A. (1997) Articulatory strengthening at edges of prosodic domains. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 101: 3728–3740.
  • Keating, Patricia A. (1990) The window model of coarticulation : articulatory evidence . In Papers in laboratory phonology I (John Kingston & Mary E. Beckman, eds.). Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 451–470.
gollark: Oh yes, we know about the objects in advance, right.
gollark: Can you even work out where it is in 3D space unambiguously without *two* cameras?
gollark: Ah. Yes. Would we not need much information about the camera and stuff?
gollark: ?
gollark: Ideally for feed the fish and whatever we would know exactly where the robot is and exactly where the target object is in 3D space and have some code work out exactly how to turn and whatever to go there, but hahahahano.

References

  1. Keating, Patricia Ann (1980). A Phonetic Study of a Voicing Contrast in Polish (PDF) (Thesis). Brown University.
  2. "People - Former | Blumstein Speech Lab". www.brown.edu. Retrieved 2017-12-22.
  3. "Pat Keating's Homepage". linguistics.ucla.edu. Retrieved 2018-09-01.
  4. "Citation index Patricia Keating". Google scholar. 23 July 2017.
  5. Farnetani & Recasens (2010). "Coarticulation and connected speech". Handbook of the Phonetic Sciences.
  6. "Association for Laboratory Phonology : Home". www.labphon.org. Retrieved 2017-07-24.
  7. "History of the IPA | International Phonetic Association". www.internationalphoneticassociation.org. Retrieved 2017-07-24.
  8. Linguistics, UCLA (2015-07-29). "Pat Keating elected next president of the International Phonetic Association". UCLA Linguistics Blog. Retrieved 2017-07-24.
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