Mental representation of tonal spreading in Bemba
Mental representation of tonal spreading in Bemba
Previous research has shown that listeners from tonal languages are better at processing tone compared to speakers from non-tonal languages. However, most of this research has tested Asian tone languages, particularly those which have many tonal contrasts and a dense tone-to-syllable association. In this paper we investigate the mental representation of derived tones in Bemba, a Bantu language that has a two-way tone contrast but which shows robust tone spreading patterns. Specifically, we test ternary high-tone spreading, a process that is unique from a phonological perspective. In a production task we test whether ternary spread can be extended to non-words. We complement this with an AX discrimination task comparing binary vs ternary spread, which are phonologically contrastive, on the one hand, with a tonally similarly salient but non-phonologically relevant contrast, on the other. We show that in both the production and percep- tion of non-words, ternary spread is distinct from binary spread, suggesting that derived tone is equally mentally represented as lexical tone is in Asian tone languages.
CITATION: Kula, Nancy C.. Mental representation of tonal spreading in Bemba . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , 2015. Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies, Vol. 33, No. 3, 2015, PP 307-323 - Available at: https://library.au.int/mental-representation-tonal-spreading-bemba