Rim Hamdi | Université de Lille (original) (raw)
Papers by Rim Hamdi
Articles dans des revues à comité de lecture reconnues (ARCL) 2018 Glass, L. Rossi, C. & Hamdi Su... more Articles dans des revues à comité de lecture reconnues (ARCL) 2018 Glass, L. Rossi, C. & Hamdi Sultan, R. (Sous press) « Interaction of phoneticphonological developments and input characteristics in early lexical development: longitudinal and crosslinguistic perspectives » S. Kern (édit.
Papers from the nineteenth Annual …, 2007
... 48% Al-Dossari 1989 Jordanian 62% Mitalb 1984 37-50% Zawaydah & de Jong 1999 Iraqi 50... more ... 48% Al-Dossari 1989 Jordanian 62% Mitalb 1984 37-50% Zawaydah & de Jong 1999 Iraqi 50% Al-Ani 1970 Lebanese 50% Obrecht 1968 Sayah 1979 Saudi 52% Al-ghamdi 1992 Egyptian 59% Norlin 1987 Tunisian ... Proceedings of the Xlth ICPhS, Tallinn, Estonia 5.447-450. ...
Proceedings of …, 2004
This paper raises questions about the discrete or continuous nature of rhythm classes. Within thi... more This paper raises questions about the discrete or continuous nature of rhythm classes. Within this framework, our study investigates speech rhythm in the different Arabic dialects that have been constantly described as stress-timed compared with other languages belonging to different rhythm categories.
lpl.univ-aix.fr
LVFULPLQDWLRQ GHV ODQJXHV HW GHV GLDOHFWHV DUDEHV SDU OH U\WKPH 5\P +DPGL 0HOLVVD %DUNDW'HIUDGDV ... more LVFULPLQDWLRQ GHV ODQJXHV HW GHV GLDOHFWHV DUDEHV SDU OH U\WKPH 5\P +DPGL 0HOLVVD %DUNDW'HIUDGDV 0DKp %HQ +DPHG /DERUDWRLUH '\QDPLTXH 'X /DQJDJH 805 &156 8QLYHUVLWp GH /\RQ )UDQFH 7pO )D[ 0pO ULPKDPGL#HWXXQLYO\RQIU PHOLVVDEDUNDW#XQLYO\RQIU 0DKH%HQ+DPHG#LVKO\RQFQUVIU
Speech Prosody 2002, International …, 2002
Speech rhythm in the different Arabic dialects investigated has been consistently described as st... more Speech rhythm in the different Arabic dialects investigated has been consistently described as stress-timed. At the same time, there is preliminary evidence from perceptual experiments that listeners use speech rhythm cues to distinguish speakers from North Africa from those of the Middle East. In an attempt to elucidate the apparent contradiction, an acoustic investigation of the proportion of vocalic intervals and the standard deviation of consonantal intervals in six dialects (Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt, Syria and Jordan) was carried out using procedures put forth by Ramus & al [1]. The results show that complex syllable and reduced vowels in the Western dialects , and longer vowels in the Eastern dialects seem to be the main factors responsible for differences in rhythmic structures. The paper also raises questions about the discrete or continuous natures of rhythm types.
Journées d'Etude …, 2006
This paper presents a study of automatic identification of Arabic dialectal areas based on a pros... more This paper presents a study of automatic identification of Arabic dialectal areas based on a prosodic automatic modelling. Inspired from Fujisaki's works, this modelling dissociates long term prosodic variations from short term micro-variations and exploits n-multigrams models. Experiments, achieved on semispontaneous recordings from 40 speakers, show that the system reaches 98% of correct identification of the three dialectal areas -Maghreb, Middle-East, and an intermediate area (Tunisia-Egypt) -with test excerpts of 7.6 seconds in average.
Proceedings of MIDL 2004, 2004
Nous nous proposons dans cette communication de présenter une vue générale des travaux en Identif... more Nous nous proposons dans cette communication de présenter une vue générale des travaux en Identification des Langues (IAL) entrepris au laboratoire Dynamique Du Langage (UMR 5596). Ces recherches portent principalement sur l'apport des connaissances ...
Eurospeech, Lisboa, 2005
The aim of this study is to demonstrate that rhythm variation across Arabic dialects is to a grea... more The aim of this study is to demonstrate that rhythm variation across Arabic dialects is to a great extent correlated with the different types of syllabic structure observed in these dialects, especially with regard to the relative complexity of onsets and codas.
Articles dans des revues à comité de lecture reconnues (ARCL) 2018 Glass, L. Rossi, C. & Hamdi Su... more Articles dans des revues à comité de lecture reconnues (ARCL) 2018 Glass, L. Rossi, C. & Hamdi Sultan, R. (Sous press) « Interaction of phoneticphonological developments and input characteristics in early lexical development: longitudinal and crosslinguistic perspectives » S. Kern (édit.
Papers from the nineteenth Annual …, 2007
... 48% Al-Dossari 1989 Jordanian 62% Mitalb 1984 37-50% Zawaydah & de Jong 1999 Iraqi 50... more ... 48% Al-Dossari 1989 Jordanian 62% Mitalb 1984 37-50% Zawaydah & de Jong 1999 Iraqi 50% Al-Ani 1970 Lebanese 50% Obrecht 1968 Sayah 1979 Saudi 52% Al-ghamdi 1992 Egyptian 59% Norlin 1987 Tunisian ... Proceedings of the Xlth ICPhS, Tallinn, Estonia 5.447-450. ...
Proceedings of …, 2004
This paper raises questions about the discrete or continuous nature of rhythm classes. Within thi... more This paper raises questions about the discrete or continuous nature of rhythm classes. Within this framework, our study investigates speech rhythm in the different Arabic dialects that have been constantly described as stress-timed compared with other languages belonging to different rhythm categories.
lpl.univ-aix.fr
LVFULPLQDWLRQ GHV ODQJXHV HW GHV GLDOHFWHV DUDEHV SDU OH U\WKPH 5\P +DPGL 0HOLVVD %DUNDW'HIUDGDV ... more LVFULPLQDWLRQ GHV ODQJXHV HW GHV GLDOHFWHV DUDEHV SDU OH U\WKPH 5\P +DPGL 0HOLVVD %DUNDW'HIUDGDV 0DKp %HQ +DPHG /DERUDWRLUH '\QDPLTXH 'X /DQJDJH 805 &156 8QLYHUVLWp GH /\RQ )UDQFH 7pO )D[ 0pO ULPKDPGL#HWXXQLYO\RQIU PHOLVVDEDUNDW#XQLYO\RQIU 0DKH%HQ+DPHG#LVKO\RQFQUVIU
Speech Prosody 2002, International …, 2002
Speech rhythm in the different Arabic dialects investigated has been consistently described as st... more Speech rhythm in the different Arabic dialects investigated has been consistently described as stress-timed. At the same time, there is preliminary evidence from perceptual experiments that listeners use speech rhythm cues to distinguish speakers from North Africa from those of the Middle East. In an attempt to elucidate the apparent contradiction, an acoustic investigation of the proportion of vocalic intervals and the standard deviation of consonantal intervals in six dialects (Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt, Syria and Jordan) was carried out using procedures put forth by Ramus & al [1]. The results show that complex syllable and reduced vowels in the Western dialects , and longer vowels in the Eastern dialects seem to be the main factors responsible for differences in rhythmic structures. The paper also raises questions about the discrete or continuous natures of rhythm types.
Journées d'Etude …, 2006
This paper presents a study of automatic identification of Arabic dialectal areas based on a pros... more This paper presents a study of automatic identification of Arabic dialectal areas based on a prosodic automatic modelling. Inspired from Fujisaki's works, this modelling dissociates long term prosodic variations from short term micro-variations and exploits n-multigrams models. Experiments, achieved on semispontaneous recordings from 40 speakers, show that the system reaches 98% of correct identification of the three dialectal areas -Maghreb, Middle-East, and an intermediate area (Tunisia-Egypt) -with test excerpts of 7.6 seconds in average.
Proceedings of MIDL 2004, 2004
Nous nous proposons dans cette communication de présenter une vue générale des travaux en Identif... more Nous nous proposons dans cette communication de présenter une vue générale des travaux en Identification des Langues (IAL) entrepris au laboratoire Dynamique Du Langage (UMR 5596). Ces recherches portent principalement sur l'apport des connaissances ...
Eurospeech, Lisboa, 2005
The aim of this study is to demonstrate that rhythm variation across Arabic dialects is to a grea... more The aim of this study is to demonstrate that rhythm variation across Arabic dialects is to a great extent correlated with the different types of syllabic structure observed in these dialects, especially with regard to the relative complexity of onsets and codas.