
Dr Philip Rose
Research Interests:
Dr Philip Rose is a Reader in Linguistics, Arts. He studies phonetics
and phonology, is an expert on tone languages and on Chinese and Chinese
dialects, and on forensic speaker identification. He has been a British
Academy Visiting Professor at the University of Edinburgh, and held
positions on the Council of the International Phonetic Association,
the Forensic Standards Committee of the Australian Speech Science and
Technology Association, and the Research Committee of the National Voice
Centre of Australia.
Selected Publications:
1987. "Considerations in the normalisation of the fundamental frequency
of linguistic tone," Speech Communication 6/4, 343-352.
1990. "Acoustics and Phonology of Complex Tone Sandhi," Phonetica 47,
1-35.
1993. "A Linguistic-Phonetic Acoustic Analysis of Shanghai Tones,"
Australian Journal of Linguistics 13, 185-219
1995 "Cantonese citation tones," In Pamela Davis and Neville Fletcher
(eds.) Vocal Fold Physiology: Controlling Complexity and Chaos, Singular
Press, 307-324.
1997 "A Seven-Tone Dialect in Southern Thai with Super-High: Pakphanang
Tonal Acoustics and Physiological Inferences." In A. Abramson (ed.)
Southeast Asian Linguistic Studies in Honour of Vichin Panupong. Chulalongkorn
University Press, 191-208
2000 "Independent Depressor and Register Effects in Wu Dialect Tonology".
Journal of Chinese Linguistics 30/1, 39-81.
2002 Forensic Speaker Identification. Taylor & Francis Forensic Science
Series, London and New York.
2003 The Technical Comparison of Forensic Voice Samples. Expert Evidence
99, Selby H. & Freckelton I. (eds). Thompson Lawbook Co., Sydney.