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Creators/Authors contains: "Crowhurst, Megan_J"

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  1. Lengthening and creaky voice are associated with prosodic finality in English. Listeners can use lengthening to identify both utterance-internal and final prosodic phrase boundaries and can use creak to locate utterance endings. Less is known about listeners' use of creak to locate internal prosodic boundaries and the relative importance assigned to duration and creak when both are present. Participants in two experiments segmented structurally ambiguous sentences in which duration and creak were manipulated to signal prosodic boundaries. When duration- and creak-based cues provided redundant information, their effects were additive. When these cues conflicted, the effect of creak was subtractive. 
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