Perception of ATR contrasts by Akan speakers: a case of perceptual near-merger

Author:

Rose Sharon1,Obiri-Yeboah Michael2,Creel Sarah3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Linguistics, University of California San Diego

2. Linguistics, Georgetown University

3. Cognitive Science, University of California San Diego

Abstract

Despite many acoustic, articulatory and phonological studies of Advanced Tongue Root (ATR) vowel contrasts and vowel harmony, studies of the perception of ATR contrasts by speakers of languages with ATR vowel distinctions are lacking. This paper explores how vowels which differ for ATR or height, or both, are distinguished by speakers of Akan, a Kwa language of Ghana. We examine whether the phonological contrastive status of the vowels impacts perception or whether it is driven by acoustic similarity. Results from two experiments reveal that vowels that differ only for ATR are well distinguished, even those that are in an allophonic relationship. Yet, vowels that are contrastive and differ by both ATR and height features, but are acoustically similar, are poorly perceived. We suggest that these vowel contrasts constitute a case of perceptual near-merger.

Publisher

Open Library of the Humanities

Subject

Computer Science Applications,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference75 articles.

1. Hypotheses on the diachronic development of the Akan language group;Abakah, E. N.;Journal of Universal Language,2016

2. Articulatory mapping of Yoruba vowels: An ultrasound study;Allen, B.Pulleyblank, D.Ajíbóyè, O.;Phonology,2013

3. Amoako, W. K. (2020). Assessing phonological development among Akan-speaking children. MA Thesis. Vancouver: University of British Columbia. [https://open.library.ubc.ca/soa/cIRcle/collections/ubctheses/24/items/1.0390995].

4. Appiah-Padi, R. (1994). Acoustic correlates of advanced tongue root. MSc. thesis, University of Alberta, Edmonton. DOI: 10.7939/R3F766H2R

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