Diadochokinetic rate in Saudi and Bahraini Arabic speakers: Dialect and the influence of syllable type

Arabic is spoken by more than 420 million people worldwide and still there are a limited number of studies on dialects of the Gulf Arabic regions where most selected respondents are male speakers. This study aimed to explore and establish normative data for the Diadochokinetic Rate (DDK) for two dia...

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Main Authors: Majid I. Alshahwan, Patricia E. Cowell, Sandra P. Whiteside
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-01-01
Series:Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1319562X19301834
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spelling doaj-4f663ba3a3a84fbd9e85cecd02293ef52020-11-25T01:41:14ZengElsevierSaudi Journal of Biological Sciences1319-562X2020-01-01271303308Diadochokinetic rate in Saudi and Bahraini Arabic speakers: Dialect and the influence of syllable typeMajid I. Alshahwan0Patricia E. Cowell1Sandra P. Whiteside2Speech and Hearing Program, Department of Rehabilitation, College of Applied Medical Sciences, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; Corresponding author at: Speech and Hearing Program, Department of Rehabilitation, College of Applied Medical Sciences, King Saud University P.O. Box 10219, Riyadh 11433, Saudi Arabia.Human Communication Sciences Department, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United KingdomHuman Communication Sciences Department, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United KingdomArabic is spoken by more than 420 million people worldwide and still there are a limited number of studies on dialects of the Gulf Arabic regions where most selected respondents are male speakers. This study aimed to explore and establish normative data for the Diadochokinetic Rate (DDK) for two dialects (Saudi Arabia’s Najdi and Bahrain’s Bahraini) speakers. Furthermore, it aimed to investigate whether there are differences between the two dialects and whether sex differences are evident. In addition, it investigated syllable type differences. The study used the monosyllables /ba, da, ga/ and the multisyllabic sequence /badaga/ to analyse the DDK rates. Acoustic analysis was carried out to obtain DDK rates for the syllables. A mixed model ANOVA was performed to investigate dialect and sex differences, in addition, to syllable type. The study included 40 males and 40 female speakers from each of the two dialects. Results showed that for DDK, Saudi speakers had faster DDK rates for the monosyllables /ba/, /da/, /ga/, than Bahrainis, while, no significant differences were observed for the multisyllabic sequences. However, there were no differences between male and female speakers with regard to the DDK rates. The syllable /ga/ showed the slowest DDK rate among the monosyllables while the multisyllabic sequences displayed the slowest DDK rates. In brief, normative data for DDK rates for clinic were determined for the Arabic Nadji and Bahrain’s Bahraini dialects. DDK rate was shown to be more sensitive to dialect differences for the monosyllable tasks. However, no sex differences were observed for the Arabic dialects in this study across all DDK tasks. Keywords: Arabic, Diadochokinetic, Najdi, Bahraini, Acoustic analysishttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1319562X19301834
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Majid I. Alshahwan
Patricia E. Cowell
Sandra P. Whiteside
spellingShingle Majid I. Alshahwan
Patricia E. Cowell
Sandra P. Whiteside
Diadochokinetic rate in Saudi and Bahraini Arabic speakers: Dialect and the influence of syllable type
Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences
author_facet Majid I. Alshahwan
Patricia E. Cowell
Sandra P. Whiteside
author_sort Majid I. Alshahwan
title Diadochokinetic rate in Saudi and Bahraini Arabic speakers: Dialect and the influence of syllable type
title_short Diadochokinetic rate in Saudi and Bahraini Arabic speakers: Dialect and the influence of syllable type
title_full Diadochokinetic rate in Saudi and Bahraini Arabic speakers: Dialect and the influence of syllable type
title_fullStr Diadochokinetic rate in Saudi and Bahraini Arabic speakers: Dialect and the influence of syllable type
title_full_unstemmed Diadochokinetic rate in Saudi and Bahraini Arabic speakers: Dialect and the influence of syllable type
title_sort diadochokinetic rate in saudi and bahraini arabic speakers: dialect and the influence of syllable type
publisher Elsevier
series Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences
issn 1319-562X
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Arabic is spoken by more than 420 million people worldwide and still there are a limited number of studies on dialects of the Gulf Arabic regions where most selected respondents are male speakers. This study aimed to explore and establish normative data for the Diadochokinetic Rate (DDK) for two dialects (Saudi Arabia’s Najdi and Bahrain’s Bahraini) speakers. Furthermore, it aimed to investigate whether there are differences between the two dialects and whether sex differences are evident. In addition, it investigated syllable type differences. The study used the monosyllables /ba, da, ga/ and the multisyllabic sequence /badaga/ to analyse the DDK rates. Acoustic analysis was carried out to obtain DDK rates for the syllables. A mixed model ANOVA was performed to investigate dialect and sex differences, in addition, to syllable type. The study included 40 males and 40 female speakers from each of the two dialects. Results showed that for DDK, Saudi speakers had faster DDK rates for the monosyllables /ba/, /da/, /ga/, than Bahrainis, while, no significant differences were observed for the multisyllabic sequences. However, there were no differences between male and female speakers with regard to the DDK rates. The syllable /ga/ showed the slowest DDK rate among the monosyllables while the multisyllabic sequences displayed the slowest DDK rates. In brief, normative data for DDK rates for clinic were determined for the Arabic Nadji and Bahrain’s Bahraini dialects. DDK rate was shown to be more sensitive to dialect differences for the monosyllable tasks. However, no sex differences were observed for the Arabic dialects in this study across all DDK tasks. Keywords: Arabic, Diadochokinetic, Najdi, Bahraini, Acoustic analysis
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1319562X19301834
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