Hollien, Harry
M.A., Ph.D., Prof.

borne July 16, 1926
Brockton, MA)

Phonetician. BS,
MEd, Boston University
1949, 1951; MA, PhD, University of Iowa 1953, 1955; Postdoctoral, Northwestern University
1958. Associate Professor to Professor: Linguistics,Speech and Criminal Justice, University of Florida 1962-1998, Professor Emeritus, 1998-p. Director to Founding Director and Research Scientist, Institute Advanced Study of the Communication Processes, UF 1963-p.

Other faculty appointments
Baylor University, University Wichita, Juilliard, Royal Institute of Technology(Stockholm), Wroclaw Technical University (Poland), Trier University (Germany).

Research grants
154 from federal, military, industrial sources and foundations.

Elected Fellow:
American Association Advancement of Science, Acoustical Society of America,
International Society of Phonetic Sciences, American Academy Forensic Sciences, Institute of Acoustics, American Speech, Hearing Association.

Major awards/prizes for research
Gould(Gould Foundation), Garcia-Sandoz (IALP), Gutzmann medal (UEP), Kay Elemetrics(ISPhS), Hunt, (AAFS), S. Smith (ISPhS), Honors of the Association (ISPhS); Senior Fulbright,1987, Professorial Excellence Award, Univ. Florida, 1996. Honorary President, ISPhS 1999,

1946-1975: U.S. Navy Commanding Officer NRRC 6-4 1966-68.
1973-1975: President American Association Phonetic Sciences ;
1989-98: President, International Society Phonetic Sciences

Consultanships/Boards
federal (NIH, VA, NSIA), military (ONR), university (22) and editorial (16).

Publications
three books, 251 articles/chapters, one patent, five scientific exhibits/films.

Interest
Forensic Phonetics, Underwater Communication, Voice, Laryngeal Physiology, Psychoacoustics.

Selected Publications
Hollien, H (1960) Vocal Pitch Variation Related to Changes in Vocal Fold Length,J.Speech Hear. Res., 3:150-156.
Hollien, H (1962) Vocal Fold Thickness and Fundamental Frequency of Phonation,J. Speech Hear. Res., 237-243.
Hollien, H and Michel, J.F. (1968) Vocal Fry as a Phonational Register, J. Speech Hear. Res., 11:600-604.
Hollien, H., Curtis, J.F. and Coleman, R.F. (1968) Investigation of Laryngeal Phenomena by Stroboscopic Lamingraphy, Med. Res. Eng., 7:24-27.
Hollien, H. and Shipp, T. (1972) Speaking Fundamental Frequency and Chronolgic Age in Males,J. Speech Hear. Res., 15:155-159.
Hollien, H., Thompson, C.L. and Cannon, B. (1973) Speech Intelligibility as a Function of Ambient Pressure and HeO2 Atmosphere, Aerospace Med., 44: 249-253.
Hollien, H. (1973) Underwater Sound Localization in Humans. J. Acoust. Soc. Amer., 53: 1288-1295.
Hollien, H (1974) On Vocal Registers, J. Phonetics, 2:125-143.
Hollien, H., Hollien, P.A., Caldwell, D. and Caldwell, M.C. (1976) Sound Production by the Atlantic Bottlenosed Dolphin, (Tursiops Truncatus) Cetology, 26:1-6.
Hollien, H. and Majewski, W. (1977) Speaker Identification by Long-Term Spectra Under Normal and Distorted Speech Conditions, J. Acoust. Soc. Amer., 62:975-980.
Hollien, H., Majewski, W. and Doherty, E.T. (1982) Perceptual Identification of Voices Under Normal, Stress and Disguised Speaking Conditions, J. Phonetics, 10:139-148.
Hollien, H., Hicks, J.W., Jr. and Klepper, B (1986) An Acoustic Approach to Diver Retrieval, Undersea Biomed. Res., 13: 111-128.
Hollien, H., Geisson, L. and Hicks, J.W., Jr. (1987) Voice Stress Evaluators and Lie Detection, J. Forensic Sciences, 32: 405-418.
Hollien, H. (1990) The Acoustics of Crime, Plenum Press, pp 363, ISBN0-306-43467-9.
Hollien, H (1993) An Oil Spill, Alcohol and the Captain, Forensic Sciences International, 60:97-105.
Hollien, H., Green, R. and Massey, K (1994) Longitudinal Research on Adolescent Voice Change in Males, J. Acoust. Soc. Amer., 96:2646-2654.
Hollien, H., Huntley, R. A., Kunzel, H. and Hollien, P.A. (1995) Proposal for Earwitness Lineups, Forensic Linguistics, 2:143-154.
Hollien, H. and Jiang, M. (1998) The Challenge of Effective Speaker Identification,(Keynote), RLA2C Avignon 1998, 2-9.
Hollien, H., DeJong, G. and Martin, C.A. (1998) Production of Intoxication States by Actors: Perception by Lay Listeners, J. Forensic Sciences, 43:1153-1162.