Part 1 Speech perception: assimilation and contrast in vowel perception, Sumi Shigeno; perception of vowel quality in a phonologically neutralized context, Robert Allen Fox; modelling human vowel identification using aspects of formant trajectory and context, Caroline B. Huang; psychoacoustic evidence for contextual effect models, Masato Akagi; the fuzzy logical model of speech perception - a framework for research and theory, Dominic W. Massaro; the effect of FO on vowel identification, Tatsuya Hirahara and Hiroaki Kato; paying attention to differences among talkers, Howard C. Nusbaum and Todd M. Morin; adaptability to differences between talkers in Japanese monosyllabic perception, Kazuhiko Kakehi; talker normalization in speech perception, David B. Pisoni; perception of American English /r/ and /l/ by native speakers of Japanese, Reiko A. Yamada and Yoh'ichi Tohkura; some effects of training Japanese listeners to identify English /r/ and /l/, Scott E. Lively et al; learning non-native phoneme contrasts - interactions among subject, stimulus and task variables, Winifred Strange; speech processing and segmentation in Romance languages, Jacques Mehler and Anne Christophe; speech prototypes - studies on the nature, function, ontogeny and phylogeny of the "centre" of speech categories, Patricia K. Kuhl; learning to hear phonetic information, Howard C. Nusbaum and Lisa Lee; processing constraints of the native phonological repertoire on the native language, Anne Cutler; perceptual normalization of vocal tract size in young children and infants, Shigeru Kiritani et al; two mechanisms of processing sound sequences, Morio Kohno. Part 2 Speech production and linguistic structure: what is the input to the speech production mechanism?, John J. Ohala; modelling the process of fundamental frequency contour generation, Hiroya Fujisaki; sensorimotor transformations and control strategies in speech, Kevin G. Munhall et al; articulatory correlates of liguistically contrastive events - where are they?, Eric Vatikiotis-Bateson and Janet Fletcher; intonational categories and the articulatory control of duration, Mary E. Beckman and Jan Edwards; perceptual vs physical models of intonation, Rene Collier; FO lowering - peripheral mechanisms and motor programming, Kiyoshi Honda; the control of segmental duration in speech synthesis using statistical methods, Nobuyoshi Kaiki and Yoshinori Sagisaka; segmental elasticity and timing in Japanese speech, Nick Campbell; the production and perception of word boundaries, Anne Cutler; syntactic influences on prosody, Jacques Terken and Rene Collier; to what extent is speech production controlled by speech perception? some questions and some experimental evidence, Sieb G. Nooteboom and Wieke Eefting; on the modelling of segmental duration control, Yoshinori Sagisaka; evidence for speech rythms across languages, Mary E. Beckman.