Nakai, S., Kunnari, S., Turk, A., Suomi, K. and Ylitalo, R. (Under Review) Utterance final lengthening and quantity in Northern Finnish.
Sugahara, M. and Turk, A. (Under Review) Durational correlates of sub-lexical constituent structure in English.
White, L. and Turk, A.(Under Review) English words on the Procrustean bed: polysyllabic shortening revisited.
Turk, A. & Shattuck-Hufnagel, S. (2007) Phrase-final lengthening in American English Journal of Phonetics 35(4), 445-472.
Astesano,C., Bard,E.G. & Turk, A. (2007). Structural influences on initial accent placement in French. Language and Speech 50(3). 423-446
Turk, A., Nakai, S. & Sugahara, M. (2006) Acoustic segment durations in prosodic research: a practical guide. In Sudhoff, Stefan, Denisa Lenertová, Roland Meyer, Sandra Pappert, Petra Augurzky,Ina Mleinek, Nicole Richter & Johannes Schließer (eds): Methods in Empirical Prosody Research. Berlin, New York: De Gruyter (= Language, Context, and Cognition, 3), 1-28.
Aylett, M. & Turk, A. (2006) Language redundancy predicts syllabic duration and the spectral characteristics of vocalic syllable nuclei. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 119(5). 3048-3059.
Meyer, M., Zaehle, T., Gountouna, V.-E., Barron, A., Jancke, L. & Turk, A. (2005). Spectro-temporal processing during speech perception involves left posterior auditory cortex. NeuroReport 16 (18), 1985-1989.
Mayo, C. & Turk, A. (2005). The influence of spectral distinctiveness on acoustic cue weighting in children's and adults' speech perception. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 118, 1730-1741.
Mayo, C. & Turk, A. (2005). The influence of spectral distinctiveness on acoustic cue weighting in children's and adults' speech perception. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 118, 1730-1741.
Aylett, M. & Turk, A. (2004) The smooth signal redundancy hypothesis: A functional explanation for relationships between redundancy, prosodic prominence, and duration in spontaneous speech. Language and Speech, 47(1), 31-56.
Mayo, C. & Turk, A. (2004) Adult-child differences in acoustic cue weighting are influenced by segmental context: Children are not always perceptually biased toward transitions, Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 115, 3184 3194.
Turk, A. and Shattuck-Hufnagel, S. (2000) Word-boundary-related durational patterns in English. Journal of Phonetics 28,397-440.
Cambier-Langeveld, T. and Turk, A. (1999) A cross-linguistic study of accentual lengthening: Dutch vs. English. Journal of Phonetics 27,171-206.
Ladefoged, P., Ladefoged, J., Turk, A., Hind, K., and Skilton, S. (1999)Phonetic structures of Scottish Gaelic. Journal of the International Phonetic Association .
Scobbie, J.M., Hewlett, N. , and Turk, A.(1999) Standard English in Edinburgh and Glasgow: the Scottish vowel length rule revealed. in P.Foulkes and G. Docherty (eds). Urban Voices . London: Arnold. Pp. 230-246.
Turk, A. and White, L. (1999) Structural effects on accentual lengthening in English. Journal of Phonetics 27, 171-206.
Turk, A. and Sawusch, J.R. (1997) The domain of accentual lengthening in American English. Journal of Phonetics 25, 25-41.
1996 Turk, A. and Sawusch, J.R.. "The processing of duration and intensity cues to prominence". Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 99(6). 3782-3790.
Shattuck-Hufnagel, S. and Turk, A. (1996) A prosody tutorial for investigators of auditory sentence processing. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 25(2). 193-247.
Turk, A., Jusczyk, P.W., and Gerken, L. (1995) Do English-learning infants use syllable weight to determine stress? Language and Speech 38(2). 143-158.
Kemler Nelson, D.G., Jusczyk, P.W., Mandel, D.R., Myers, J., Turk, A., and Gerken, L. (1995) The Headturn Preference Procedure for testing auditory perception. Infant Behavior and Development 18. 111-116.
Turk, A. (1994) Articulatory phonetic clues to syllable affiliation: gestural characteristics of bilabial stops. In P. Keating (ed.) Papers in Laboratory Phonology III, Cambridge University Press. 107-135.