Daniel Pape
Assistant Professor
Department of Linguistics and Languages
Centre for Advanced Research in Experimental and Applied Linguistics
Canada
Biography
Dr. Daniel Pape is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Linguistics and Languages at McMaster University. His research focuses on experimental phonetics, the link between speech production and speech perception, and the relationship between phonetics and neurolinguistics. More specifically his research examines the use and interplay of acoustic cues (i.e., cue-weighting) for (1) speech production and perception and (2) articulatory and biomechanical constraints in speech perception. Dr. Pape received his Ph.D. from the Humboldt University of Berlin (Germany) in the area of Phonetics with the dissertation entitled “Microprosodic differences in a cross-linguistic vowel comparison of speech production and speech perception”. He then pursued his post-doctoral research at the University of Aveiro (Portugal) working on the link between speech production and speech perception. His post-doctoral research focus was on the use of different acoustic and perceptual cues to stop and fricative voicing, cross-linguistically comparing the languages- European Portuguese, Italian, and German. During his post-doctoral training, Dr. Pape had an opportunity to work at the Gipsa-labs in Grenoble (France) where he investigated the use of biomechanical and articulatory synthesis for speech perception purposes.
Research Interest
Linguistics and Languages