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Fundamental Frequency and Phonation Differences in the Production of Stop Laryngeal Contrasts of Endangered Shina

Authors :
Qandeel Hussain
Source :
Languages, Vol 6, Iss 139, p 139 (2021), Languages, Volume 6, Issue 3
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Shina is an endangered Indo-Aryan (Dardic) language spoken in Gilgit, Northern Pakistan. The present study investigates the acoustic correlates of Shina’s three-way stop laryngeal contrast across five places of articulation. A wide range of acoustic correlates were measured including fundamental frequency (F0), spectral tilt (H1*-H2*, H1*-A1*, H1*-A2*, and H1*-A3*), and cepstral peak prominence (CPP). Voiceless aspirated stops were characterized by higher fundamental frequency, spectral tilt, and cepstral peak prominence, compared to voiceless unaspirated and voiced unaspirated stops. These results suggest that Shina is among those languages which have a raising effect of aspiration on the pitch and spectral tilt onsets of the following vowels. Positive correlations among fundamental frequency, spectral tilt, and cepstral peak prominence were observed. The findings of this study will contribute to the phonetic documentation of endangered Dardic languages.

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
6
Issue :
139
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Languages
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9dd3fc82a77f9154d67a964a5a8469c0