Contents
1Awareness, Salience, and Stereotypes in Exemplar-Based Models of Speech Production and Perception
2Sounding Chinese and Listening Chinese: Awareness and Knowledge in the Laboratory
4Processing Grammatical Differences: Perceiving versus Noticing
5What It Means to Be an Outsider: How Exposure to Regional Variation Shapes Children’s Awareness of Regional Accents in Their Native Language
6Towards a Cognitively Realistic Model of Meaningful Sociolinguistic Variation
7Place-Linked Expectations and Listener Awareness of Regional Accents
9Silence as Control: Shame and Self-Consciousness in Sociolinguistic Positioning
10Theorizing Salience: Orthographic Practice and the Enfigurement of Minority Languages
11Sociolinguistic Agency and the Gendered Voice: Metalinguistic Negotiations of Vocal Masculinization among Female-to-Male Transgender Speakers