1. Longitudinal acoustic and ultrasound recordings were obtained from primary schools in a rural area around 60 km from Munich. The results showed that Bavarian sounds in children were more like standard German than in adults but only if the children's Bavarian sounds were already skewed phonetically in the direction of the standard.
2. Similar recordings were obtained over four years from primary school children in a rural area of Albania and in the capital, Tirana. The results showed a shift of the rural variety towards the standard spoken in Tirana, more so in children than adults, but predominantly in vowels that do not function to distinguish between word meanings.
3. With regard to the development of a computational agent-based model of sound change in order to predict the direction of spoken accent development: the results of the simulations showed that the sounds of one group of dialect speakers that are skewed in the direction of another group of dialect speakers are likely to change through spoken interaction between speakers and listeners.
4. Recordings from real-time magnetic resonance imaging were made for the investigating of vowel nasalization in American and British English speakers. The results showed that the sound change by which vowels become increasingly nasalized over time is less advanced in British than American English.
5. Recordings from Antarctic 'winterers' were made before and during their long-term stay in Antarctica. The acoustic analysis provided evidence of the development of a common spoken accent whose direction could be predicted by the computational model in 1 above, using input data from the recordings before they went to Antarctica.
6. Summarising across 1-5 above, the project has shown that the direction of spoken accent change can be quite accurately predicted by a publicly-available, agent-based computational model of sound change. This issue has been addressed from numerous perspectives through analyses of varieties and dialects of Albanian, Chinese, English, French, German, and Spanish and disseminated in 26 international journal and conference proceedings publications as well as two awarded dissertations. The research project has resulted in over 20 reports in the media of which two were invited articles in a leading UK national newspaper. The longevity of the research is evident through collaborations with current scientists at other European universities who were former post-doctoral members of the project.