2015
DOI: 10.1037/xhp0000032
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Processing of Arabic diacritical marks: Phonological–syntactic disambiguation of homographic verbs and visual crowding effects.

Abstract: Diacritics convey vowel sounds in Arabic, allowing accurate word pronunciation.Mostly, modern Arabic is printed non-diacritised. Otherwise, diacritics appear either only on homographic words when not disambiguated by surrounding text or on all words as in religious or educational texts. In an eye tracking experiment we examined sentence processing in the absence of diacritics, and when diacritics were presented in either modes. Heterophonic-homographic were embedded in temporarily ambiguous sentences where i… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(60 citation statements)
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“…However, our surveys clearly indicated that in printed modern Arabic text diacritics are mostly added to the homograph to point the reader towards one of its subordinate pronunciations in a non-constraining context (Hermena et al, 2015 subordinate diacritization pattern that would appear on the string ‫قدر‬ /qdr/ in a sentence (e.g., the noun version meaning vessel, or the verb version estimated/destined), will be the one which best fits the syntactic structure and context of the sentence. Indeed, constructing a comprehensible Arabic sentence where structure and context do not constrain the reader towards a smaller number of possible alternative pronunciations to choose from would be nearly impossible.…”
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“…However, our surveys clearly indicated that in printed modern Arabic text diacritics are mostly added to the homograph to point the reader towards one of its subordinate pronunciations in a non-constraining context (Hermena et al, 2015 subordinate diacritization pattern that would appear on the string ‫قدر‬ /qdr/ in a sentence (e.g., the noun version meaning vessel, or the verb version estimated/destined), will be the one which best fits the syntactic structure and context of the sentence. Indeed, constructing a comprehensible Arabic sentence where structure and context do not constrain the reader towards a smaller number of possible alternative pronunciations to choose from would be nearly impossible.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Surveying ambiguous homographic words in Arabic and the use of diacritics in print, Hermena et al (2015) indicated that the vast majority of Arabic ambiguous homographic words are biased homographs (see e.g., Rayner & Duffy, 1986;Sereno, O'Donnell, & Rayner, 2006). Essentially, the multiple pronunciations of the Arabic homographs are not equally commonly encountered, or produced, by readers.…”
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confidence: 99%
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