@phdthesis{Engels2004, author = {Engels, Eva}, title = {Adverb placement : an optimality theoretic approach}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-2453}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, year = {2004}, abstract = {Adverb positioning is guided by syntactic, semantic, and pragmatic considerations and is subject to cross-linguistic as well as language-specific variation. The goal of the thesis is to identify the factors that determine adverb placement in general (Part I) as well as in constructions in which the adverb's sister constituent is deprived of its phonetic material by movement or ellipsis (gap constructions, Part II) and to provide an Optimality Theoretic approach to the contrasts in the effects of these factors on the distribution of adverbs in English, French, and German. In Optimality Theory (Prince \& Smolensky 1993), grammaticality is defined as optimal satisfaction of a hierarchy of violable constraints: for a given input, a set of output candidates are produced out of which that candidate is selected as grammatical output which optimally satisfies the constraint hierarchy. Since grammaticality crucially relies on the hierarchic relations of the constraints, cross-linguistic variation can be traced back to differences in the language-specific constraint rankings. Part I shows how diverse phenomena of adverb placement can be captured by corresponding constraints and their relative rankings: - contrasts in the linearization of adverbs and verbs/auxiliaries in English and French - verb placement in German and the filling of the prefield position - placement of focus-sensitive adverbs - fronting of topical arguments and adverbs Part II extends the analysis to a particular phenomenon of adverb positioning: the avoidance of adverb attachment to a phonetically empty constituent (gap). English and French are similar in that the acceptability of pre-gap adverb placement depends on the type of adverb, its scope, and the syntactic construction (English: wh-movement vs. topicalization / VP Fronting / VP Ellipsis, inverted vs. non-inverted clauses; French: CLLD vs. Cleft, simple vs. periphrastic tense). Yet, the two languages differ in which strategies a specific type of adverb may pursue to escape placement in front of a certain type of gap. In contrast to English and French, placement of an adverb in front of a gap never gives rise to ungrammaticality in German. Rather, word ordering has to obey the syntactic, semantic, and pragmatic principles discussed in Part I; whether or not it results in adverb attachment to a phonetically empty constituent seems to be irrelevant: though constraints are active in every language, the emergence of a visible effect of their requirements in a given language depends on their relative ranking. The complex interaction of the diverse factors as well as their divergent effects on adverb placement in the various languages are accounted for by the universal constraints and their language-specific hierarchic relations in the OT framework.}, subject = {Adverb}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{RodriguezCubillos2018, author = {Rodriguez Cubillos, Andres Eduardo}, title = {Understanding the impact of heterozygosity on metabolism, growth and hybrid necrosis within a local Arabidopsis thaliana collection site}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-416758}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {106}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Plants are unable to move away from unwanted environments and therefore have to locally adapt to changing conditions. Arabidopsis thaliana (Arabidopsis), a model organism in plant biology, has been able to rapidly colonize a wide spectrum of environments with different biotic and abiotic challenges. In recent years, natural variation in Arabidopsis has shown to be an excellent resource to study genes underlying adaptive traits and hybridization's impact on natural diversity. Studies on Arabidopsis hybrids have provided information on the genetic basis of hybrid incompatibilities and heterosis, as well as inheritance patterns in hybrids. However, previous studies have focused mainly on global accessions and yet much remains to be known about variation happening within a local growth habitat. In my PhD, I investigated the impact of heterozygosity at a local collection site of Arabidopsis and its role in local adaptation. I focused on two different projects, both including hybrids among Arabidopsis individuals collected around T{\"u}bingen in Southern Germany. The first project sought to understand the impact of hybridization on metabolism and growth within a local Arabidopsis collection site. For this, the inheritance patterns in primary and secondary metabolism, together with rosette size of full diallel crosses among seven parents originating from Southern Germany were analyzed. In comparison to primary metabolites, compounds from secondary metabolism were more variable and showed pronounced non-additive inheritance patterns. In addition, defense metabolites, mainly glucosinolates, displayed the highest degree of variation from the midparent values and were positively correlated with a proxy for plant size. In the second project, the role of ACCELERATED CELL DEATH 6 (ACD6) in the defense response pathway of Arabidopsis necrotic hybrids was further characterized. Allelic interactions of ACD6 have been previously linked to hybrid necrosis, both among global and local Arabidopsis accessions. Hence, I characterized the early metabolic and ionic changes induced by ACD6, together with marker gene expression assays of physiological responses linked to its activation. An upregulation of simple sugars and metabolites linked to non-enzymatic antioxidants and the TCA cycle were detected, together with putrescine and acids linked to abiotic stress responses. Senescence was found to be induced earlier in necrotic hybrids and cytoplasmic calcium signaling was unaffected in response to temperature. In parallel, GFP-tagged constructs of ACD6 were developed. This work therefore gave novel insights on the role of heterozygosity in natural variation and adaptation and expanded our current knowledge on the physiological and molecular responses associated with ACD6 activation.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Aktas2023, author = {Aktas, Berfin}, title = {Variation in coreference patterns}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-59608}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-596086}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {xviii, 195}, year = {2023}, abstract = {This thesis explores the variation in coreference patterns across language modes (i.e., spoken and written) and text genres. The significance of research on variation in language use has been emphasized in a number of linguistic studies. For instance, Biber and Conrad [2009] state that "register/genre variation is a fundamental aspect of human language" and "Given the ubiquity of register/genre variation, an understanding of how linguistic features are used in patterned ways across text varieties is of central importance for both the description of particular languages and the development of cross-linguistic theories of language use."[p.23] We examine the variation across genres with the primary goal of contributing to the body of knowledge on the description of language use in English. On the computational side, we believe that incorporating linguistic knowledge into learning-based systems can boost the performance of automatic natural language processing systems, particularly for non-standard texts. Therefore, in addition to their descriptive value, the linguistic findings we provide in this study may prove to be helpful for improving the performance of automatic coreference resolution, which is essential for a good text understanding and beneficial for several downstream NLP applications, including machine translation and text summarization. In particular, we study a genre of texts that is formed of conversational interactions on the well-known social media platform Twitter. Two factors motivate us: First, Twitter conversations are realized in written form but resemble spoken communication [Scheffler, 2017], and therefore they form an atypical genre for the written mode. Second, while Twitter texts are a complicated genre for automatic coreference resolution, due to their widespread use in the digital sphere, at the same time they are highly relevant for applications that seek to extract information or sentiments from users' messages. Thus, we are interested in discovering more about the linguistic and computational aspects of coreference in Twitter conversations. We first created a corpus of such conversations for this purpose and annotated it for coreference. We are interested in not only the coreference patterns but the overall discourse behavior of Twitter conversations. To address this, in addition to the coreference relations, we also annotated the coherence relations on the corpus we compiled. The corpus is available online in a newly developed form that allows for separating the tweets from their annotations. This study consists of three empirical analyses where we independently apply corpus-based, psycholinguistic and computational approaches for the investigation of variation in coreference patterns in a complementary manner. (1) We first make a descriptive analysis of variation across genres through a corpus-based study. We investigate the linguistic aspects of nominal coreference in Twitter conversations and we determine how this genre relates to other text genres in spoken and written modes. In addition to the variation across genres, studying the differences in spoken-written modes is also in focus of linguistic research since from Woolbert [1922]. (2) In order to investigate whether the language mode alone has any effect on coreference patterns, we carry out a crowdsourced experiment and analyze the patterns in the same genre for both spoken and written modes. (3) Finally, we explore the potentials of domain adaptation of automatic coreference resolution (ACR) for the conversational Twitter data. In order to answer the question of how the genre of Twitter conversations relates to other genres in spoken and written modes with respect to coreference patterns, we employ a state-of-the-art neural ACR model [Lee et al., 2018] to examine whether ACR on Twitter conversations will benefit from mode-based separation in out-of-domain training data.}, language = {en} }