鶹

Skip to main content

Utility

  • Undergraduate Admissions
  • Graduate Admissions
  • Office Directory

Actions Menu

  • Visit
Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences

Main navigation

  • About

    • About Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences
    • Awards
    • Research
    • Year in Review
    • Access, Opportunity and Community Impact
  • Academics

    • Academics
    • Degrees, Majors & Minors
    • General Education Program
    • Experiential Learning
    • Humanities @ 鶹
    • Science & Technology Studies
  • Students

    • Resources for All Students
    • Prospective Students
    • Undergraduate Students
    • Graduate Students
    • Monday Mailer
  • Faculty & Staff

    • Faculty & Staff
    • Resources for Faculty
    • Forms & Guidance
    • Resources for Staff
    • Faculty & Staff News
    • Dean's Office Directory
    • Faculty Hiring
  • Alumni

    • Dietrich College Alumni
    • Alumni News
    • Dietrich College Newsletter
    • Alumni Awards
    • Alumni Association
    • Giving @ Dietrich College
  • News

Utility

  • Undergraduate Admissions
  • Graduate Admissions
  • Office Directory

Actions Menu

  • Visit

What can we help you find?

Messou Fofana

2026-2027

  • Ish Acharya
  • Jocelyn Cordero
  • Lou Feng
  • Messou Fofana
  • Gavin Kelly
  • Riley Lawrence
  • Steven Ma
  • Rachel Moreci
  • Evie Wright
  • Lynn Zhang
Messou Fofana

Tone-to-Tune Mapping in Maninka Song

Advisor: Christina Bjorndahl 
Major: Human-Computer Interaction

Abstract

In tonal languages, pitch can change a word’s meaning. Maninka, a West African tonal language spoken primarily in Guinea, uses pitch to distinguish words (e.g., wa can mean either “to go” [wá, High tone] or “wilderness” [wà, Low tone]) and to encode grammatical information, including a mid-tone marking definiteness often not distinguished in writing from the high tone (e.g., kònó “bird” vs. kònó “the bird”), though the difference is audible in speech. But what happens when these words are sung? This project investigates what acoustic features distinguish these tones in speech, and what happens to those features when tone interacts with melody in Maninka songs. To do so, I first analyze tonal production across generations of speakers, then conduct a perception study of lyrics from a Maninka song to assess how melody affects the Maninka high- and mid-tones; finally, I will run a production experiment testing whether singers can preserve tonal meaning under melodic constraints. This work provides the first empirical study of tone in Maninka, examines whether the high-mid contrast is changing across generations, and contributes to broader theories of how listeners understand language when pitch is shaped by music.

Bio

I was born in Brockton, Massachusetts, and raised in Conakry, Guinea, growing up between languages like Maninka, French and English, which might explain why I picked up four more and still code-mix mid-sentence without noticing. Speaking these languages taught me how much more you can learn about the world, about people, and about their culture when they don’t have to translate themselves for you, which naturally connects to my academic path.

I’m pursuing dual degrees in Human-Computer Interaction and Linguistics, with a minor in Arabic Studies, and I’m interested in how technology and human experience intersect, specifically, how to build products and systems that go beyond functionality and are useful and inclusive to the community they serve.

Outside the classroom, I lead organizations like the Young African Leaders Association, ColorStack and the French-Speaking Student Association, and participate in a few others; these are the spaces where I learn from and have fun with my peers and contribute to communities that have shaped and supported my growth throughout college.

In my free time, you’ll find me reading novels and Arab poetry, learning Hausa or Yoruba, translating songs, talking with family in various hybrid languages, and attempting — sometimes successfully — to cook Guinean meals.

Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences

  • Contact Us
  • Giving at Dietrich College
  • Dietrich College Alumni

5000 Forbes Avenue 
Pittsburgh, PA 15213  
(412) 268-2000

About 鶹

  • Careers at 鶹
  • Maps, Parking & Transportation
  • Health & Safety
  • News

Academics

  • Majors
  • Graduate
  • Undergraduate Admission
  • Graduate Admission
  • International Students
  • Scholarship & Financial Aid

Our Impact

  • Centers & Institutes
  • Business Engagement
  • Global Locations
  • Work That Matters
  • Regional Impact

Top Tools

  • Academic Calendar
  • Canvas
  • The HUB
  • Workday

Copyright © 2026 鶹

  • Title IX
  • Privacy
  • Legal