about
RESEARCH
This an archive page for research works from my previous life as an academic (see brief CV below). Before becoming a pronunciation adviser for the UK’s largest public broadcaster, I worked on (socio)phonetic variation and sound change, and – though less centrally – their implications for theories of phonological knowledge and the phonetics-phonology interface.
The research I had just started when I decided to leave academia for the greener pastures of broadcast media was on the use of creaky voice (or vocal fry) in the L2 English and L1 Dutch by speakers in a multilingual academic community (an undergraduate campus college) where English is the lingua franca. Joint research with my colleagues Hielke Vriesendorp, Yosiane White and Hugo Quené this was part of a larger project into phonetic convergence. Our initial findings (that these Dutch speakers use creaky voice to roughly the same extent as L1 English speakers have been reported to in other studies, and that it’s speaker-dependent, rather than language-dependent) were published in the latest ICPhS proceedings volume.
Apart from some as yet unpublished work on voicing in Dutch, I mostly worked on rhotics, aka r-sounds, and especially those in Dutch. If you only ever read one thing about r-variation, I’d say make it the chapter on rhotics in the Routledge Handbook of Sociophonetics (Ed. Christopher Strelluf, 2023) – co-authored with Hans Van de Velde and Roeland van Hout.
If you’d like to dive into more detail, Patrycja Strycharczuk and I collaborated on an ultrasound study of so-called derived geminates (and the potential resulting degemination) involving Dutch r. The resulting article was published in Journal of Phonetics (2018).
Even more detail, 300+ pages of it in fact, is found in my PhD thesis (2015) on the large-scale phonetic variation found with Dutch r. In it, I develop a model of progressive sound change to explain the origins, development and current status of Dutch r variation. To untangle the geographical, social and linguistic factors involved, I collected and analysed data from some 400 speakers (~20.000 tokens) in the Netherlands and Flanders. With Jim Scobbie at Queen Margaret University (Edinburgh) I also collected articulatory (ultrasound) data focused on Dutch coda approximant r, an innovative variant. The results of this study appeared as a book chapter (2010, see below), and they are also discussed in my thesis.
works
Publications
book
Sebregts, K. (2015). The Sociophonetics and Phonology of Dutch r [PhD thesis]. Utrecht: LOT. [pdf] [order hard copy here] ⠗
peer-reviewed articles and chapters
Sebregts, K., H. Van de Velde, & R. van Hout (2023). Sociophonetics and rhotics. In: C. Strelluf (Ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Sociophonetics. Routledge. [pdf] ⠗
Sebregts, K., H. Vriesendorp, H. Quené & Y. White (2023). Creaky voice in L1 Dutch and L2 English. In: R. Skarnitzl & J. Volin (Eds.), Proceedings of the 20th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Prague 2023 (pp. 1841-1845). Guarant International. [pdf] ⠚
Sebregts, K. & P. Strycharczuk (2019). Contrast under pressure: the phonetics of Dutch past tense allomorphy. In: Calhoun, S., P. Escudero, M. Tabain & P. Warren (Eds.), Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Melbourne, Australia 2019 (pp. 339-343). Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association Inc. [pdf] ⠞
Strycharczuk, P. & K. Sebregts (2018). Articulatory dynamics of (de)gemination in Dutch. Journal of Phonetics 68: 138-149. [open access link] ⠗
Van der Wouden, T. et al. (2016). Het Taalportaal. Nederlandse Taalkunde 21(1), 157-168. [link]⠖
Sebregts, K. (2015). Boundary disputes and sociophonetic variation: schwa-epenthesis in Dutch rC clusters. In: The Scottish Consortium for ICPhS 2015 (Ed.), Proceedings of the 18th International Congress of the Phonetic Sciences. The University of Glasgow. Paper 0914. [pdf] ⠗
Strycharczuk, P. & K. Sebregts (2014). Erring on the side of phonology. In: Auer, A. & B. Köhnlein (Eds.), Linguistics in the Netherlands 2014. John Benjamins. [pdf] ⠗
Botma, E.D., K. Sebregts & D. Smakman (2012). The Phonetics and Phonology of Dutch mid vowels before /l/. Laboratory Phonology 3(2): 273-297. [pdf] ⠇
Scobbie, J.M. & K. Sebregts (2010). Acoustic, articulatory and phonological perspectives on allophonic variation of /r/ in Dutch. In: Folli, R. & C. Ulbrich (eds.), Interfaces in Linguistics: New Research Perspectives. Oxford University Press. [proof pdf] [publisher’s website] ⠗
Scobbie, J.M., K.Sebregts & J. Stuart-Smith (2009). Dutch rhotic allophony, coda weakening, and the phonetics-phonology interface. QMU Speech Science Research Centre Working Papers, WP-18. [pdf] ⠗
Sebregts, K., E. Tops, R. van Bezooijen, H. Van de Velde, R. van Hout, R. Willemyns & W. Zonneveld (2003). Socio-geografische en linguïstische variatie in de uitspraak van (r). Een onderzoek in Nederlandse en Vlaamse grote steden. In: Koole, T, J. Nortier & B. Tahitu, Artikelen van de Vierde Sociolinguistische Conferentie. Eburon, 375-385. [pdf] ⠗
as editor
Kager, R., J. Grijzenhout & K. Sebregts (Eds.) 2014. Where the Principles Fail. A Festschrift for Wim Zonneveld on the Occasion of his 64th Birthday. Utrecht: UiL-OTS. ⠵
Selected presentations
abstract peer-reviewed
Long-term phonetic convergence vs. speaker-specificity: creaky voice in L2 English. The 19th Conference on Laboratory Phonology (LabPhon 19), Seoul, Republic of Korea, 27-29 June 2024. (with Hielke Vriesendorp, Hugo Quené, and Yosiane White, poster) ⠚
Constraints on phonetic convergence: creaky voice on the college campus. Workshop on phonetic imitation (LabPhon 19 Satellite), Seoul, Republic of Korea, 26 June 2024. (with Hielke Vriesendorp, Hugo Quené, and Yosiane White) ⠚
Creaky voice in L1 Dutch and L2 English. ICPhS 2023, Prague, Czechia, 7-11 August 2023. (with Hielke Vriesendorp, Hugo Quené, and Yosiane White, poster) [pdf] ⠚
Contrast under pressure: the phonetics of Dutch past tense allomorphy. ICPhS 2019, Melbourne, Australia, 5-9 August 2019. (with Patrycja Strycharczuk) ⠞
Changing factors in the rise of approximant r in Dutch. New Ways of Analyzing Variation 45 (NWAV45), Vancouver, Canada, 3-6 November 2016. (with Roeland van Hout and Hans Van de Velde, poster) [pdf] ⠗
Articulatory dynamics of degemination in Dutch. The 15th Conference on Laboratory Phonology (LabPhon15), Ithaca, NY, USA, 13-17 July 2016. (with Patrycja Strycharczuk, poster) ⠗
Yorkshire Assimilation at the interface. The 7th Northern Englishes Workshop (NEW7), Edinburgh, UK, 14-15 April 2016. (with Tim Zee) [pdf]⠙
/r/-allophony and gemination: An ultrasound study of gestural blending in Dutch. Ultrafest VII, Hong Kong, China, 8-10 December 2015. (with Patrycja Strycharczuk) ⠗
From coda to coda, from town across town: The rise of coda approximant r in Dutch. UKLVC 10, York, UK, 1-3 September 2015.⠗
Boundary disputes and sociophonetic variation: schwa-epenthesis in Dutch rC clusters. ICPhS 2015, Glasgow, UK, 10-14 August 2015. (poster) ⠗
Rhotic relationships: diachrony vs. synchrony in representing /r/. 23rd Manchester Phonology Meeting, Manchester, UK, 28-30 May 2015. (poster) ⠗
Erring on the side of phonology. 21st Manchester Phonology Meeting, Manchester, UK, 23-25 May 2013. (with Patrycja Strycharczuk) ⠗
Representational ambiguity and the phonetics of Dutch past tense formation. The 13th Conference on Laboratory Phonology (LabPhon13), Stuttgart, Germany, 27-29 July 2012. (with Patrycja Strycharczuk, poster) [pdf] ⠞
Functional, non-functional or multi-functional? Of covert gestures and ‘free’ variation. Old World Conference in Phonology 8 (OCP8), Marrakech, Morocco, 20-22 January 2011. (with James M Scobbie) [abstract] ⠗
Pre-lateral mid-vowel colouring and the Dutch tense-lax contrast. Old World Conference in Phonology 7 (OCP7), Nice, France, 28-30 January 2010. (with Bert Botma and Dick Smakman) ⠇
From subtle to gross variation: an ultrasound tongue imaging study of Dutch and Scottish English /r/. 10th Conference on Laboratory Phonology (LabPhon), Paris, France, 29 June-1 July 2006. (with James M. Scobbie and Jane Stuart-Smith, poster) ⠗
invited/colloquia
That is what we R: phonetics and phonology in rhotic identity. Plenary, ‘r-atics 6, Paris, France, 7-8 November 2019. ⠗
Phonological identity of Dutch rhotics: variationist and articulatory evidence. Rhotiques: l’Invariant et des Avatars, Journée d’Étude, Paris 8, France, 23 March 2018.⠗
The devil is in the articulatory detail: dialectological and phonological implications of Dutch r variation. Methods in Dialectology XV, Groningen, Netherlands, 11-15 August 2014. [abstract] ⠗
Dutch r variation: potential and problems for exemplar modelling. Exemplar-based Modelling in Phonology Workshop, Freiburg, Germany, 26-27 September 2011. ⠗