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المؤلفKulikov, Vladimir
تاريخ الإتاحة2022-01-30T07:16:22Z
تاريخ النشر2021-01-01
اسم المنشورLanguage and Speech
المعرّفhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0023830920986821
الاقتباسKulikov, Vladimir. Voice and Emphasis in Arabic Coronal Stops: Evidence for Phonological Compensation. Language and Speech. issn:00238309
الرقم المعياري الدولي للكتاب00238309
معرّف المصادر الموحدhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85100185693&origin=inward
معرّف المصادر الموحدhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/26061
الملخصThe current study investigates multiple acoustic cues–voice onset time (VOT), spectral center of gravity (SCG) of burst, pitch (F0), and frequencies of the first (F1) and second (F2) formants at vowel onset—associated with phonological contrasts of voicing and emphasis in production of Arabic coronal stops. The analysis of the acoustic data collected from eight native speakers of the Qatari dialect showed that the three stops form three distinct modes on the VOT scale: [d] is (pre)voiced, voiceless [t] is aspirated, and emphatic [ṭ] is voiceless unaspirated. The contrast is also maintained in spectral cues. Each cue influences production of coronal stops while their relevance to phonological contrasts varies. VOT was most relevant for voicing, but F2 was mostly associated with emphasis. The perception experiment revealed that listeners were able to categorize ambiguous tokens correctly and compensate for phonological contrasts. The listeners’ results were used to evaluate three categorization models to predict the intended category of a coronal stop: a model with unweighted and unadjusted cues, a model with weighted cues compensating for phonetic context, and a model with weighted cues compensating for the voicing and emphasis contrasts. The findings suggest that the model with phonological compensation performed most similar to human listeners both in terms of accuracy rate and error pattern.
اللغةen
الناشرSAGE
الموضوعphonetics
Qatari dialect
Arabic
cue
emphasis
voicing
VOT
العنوانVoice and Emphasis in Arabic Coronal Stops: Evidence for Phonological Compensation
النوعArticle
dc.accessType Open Access


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