TY - JOUR A1 - Wierzba, Marta A1 - Fanselow, Gisbert T1 - Factors influencing the acceptability of object fronting in German JF - The journal of comparative Germanic linguistics N2 - In this paper, we address some controversially debated empirical questions concerning object fronting in German by a series of acceptability rating studies. We investigated three kinds of factors: (i) properties of the subject (given/new, pronoun/full DP), (ii) emphasis, (iii) register. The first factor is predicted to play a crucial role by models in which object fronting possibilities are limited by prosodic properties. Two experiments provide converging evidence for a systematic effect of this factor: we find that the relative acceptability of object fronting across subjects that require an accent (new DPs) is lower than across deaccentable subjects (pronouns and given DPs). Other models predict object fronting across full phrases (but not across pronouns) to be limited to an emphatic interpretation. This prediction is also borne out, suggesting that both types of models capture an empirically valid generalization and can be seen as complementing each other rather than competing with each other. Finally, we find support for the view that informal register facilitates object fronting. In sum, our experiments contribute to clarifying the empirical basis concerning a phenomenon influenced by a range of interacting factors. This, in turn, informs theoretical approaches to the prefield position and helps to identify factors that need to be carefully controlled in this field of research. KW - German KW - Object fronting KW - Prefield KW - Givenness KW - Emphasis KW - Register KW - Experiments KW - Acceptability Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10828-020-09113-1 SN - 1383-4924 SN - 1572-8552 VL - 23 IS - 1 SP - 77 EP - 124 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Westphal, Andrea A1 - Vock, Miriam A1 - Kretschmann, Julia T1 - Unravelling the relationship between teacher-assigned grades, student personality, and standardized test scores JF - Frontiers in psychology / Frontiers Research Foundation N2 - The Big Five personality traits play a major role in student achievement. As such, there is consistent evidence that students that are more conscientious receive better teacher-assigned grades in secondary school. However, research often does not support the claim that students that are more conscientious similarly achieve higher scores in domain-specific standardized achievement tests. Based on the Invest-and-Accrue Model, we argue that conscientiousness explains to some extent why certain students receive better grades despite similar academic accomplishments (i.e., achieving similar scores in domain-specific standardized achievement tests). Therefore, the present study examines to what extent the relationship between student personality and teacher-assigned grades consists of direct as opposed to indirect associations (via subject-specific standardized test scores). We used a representative sample of 14,710 ninth-grade students to estimate these direct and indirect pathways in mathematics and German. Structural equation models showed that test scores explained between 8 and 11% of the variance in teacher-assigned grades in mathematics and German. The Big Five personality traits in students additionally explained between 8 and 10% of the variance in grades. Finally, the personality-grade relationship consisted of direct (0.02 | β| ≤ 0.27) and indirect associations via test scores (0.01 | β| ≤ 0.07). Conscientiousness explained discrepancies between teacher-assigned grades and students’ scores in domain-specific standardized tests to a greater extent than any of the other Big Five personality traits. Our findings suggest that students that are more conscientious may invest more effort to accomplish classroom goals, but fall short of mastery. KW - Big Five KW - student personality KW - teacher-assigned grades KW - grading practice KW - conscientiousness KW - mathematics KW - German KW - secondary school Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.627440 SN - 1664-1078 IS - 12 PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER - TY - GEN A1 - Westphal, Andrea A1 - Vock, Miriam A1 - Kretschmann, Julia T1 - Unravelling the relationship between teacher-assigned grades, student personality, and standardized test scores T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Humanwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - The Big Five personality traits play a major role in student achievement. As such, there is consistent evidence that students that are more conscientious receive better teacher-assigned grades in secondary school. However, research often does not support the claim that students that are more conscientious similarly achieve higher scores in domain-specific standardized achievement tests. Based on the Invest-and-Accrue Model, we argue that conscientiousness explains to some extent why certain students receive better grades despite similar academic accomplishments (i.e., achieving similar scores in domain-specific standardized achievement tests). Therefore, the present study examines to what extent the relationship between student personality and teacher-assigned grades consists of direct as opposed to indirect associations (via subject-specific standardized test scores). We used a representative sample of 14,710 ninth-grade students to estimate these direct and indirect pathways in mathematics and German. Structural equation models showed that test scores explained between 8 and 11% of the variance in teacher-assigned grades in mathematics and German. The Big Five personality traits in students additionally explained between 8 and 10% of the variance in grades. Finally, the personality-grade relationship consisted of direct (0.02 | β| ≤ 0.27) and indirect associations via test scores (0.01 | β| ≤ 0.07). Conscientiousness explained discrepancies between teacher-assigned grades and students’ scores in domain-specific standardized tests to a greater extent than any of the other Big Five personality traits. Our findings suggest that students that are more conscientious may invest more effort to accomplish classroom goals, but fall short of mastery. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Humanwissenschaftliche Reihe - 719 KW - Big Five KW - student personality KW - teacher-assigned grades KW - grading practice KW - conscientiousness KW - mathematics KW - German KW - secondary school Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-523024 SN - 1866-8364 IS - 12 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Szagun, Gisela A1 - Schramm, Satyam Antonio T1 - Lexically driven or early structure building? BT - Constructing an early grammar in German child language JF - First language N2 - This study examines the role of the lexicon and grammatical structure building in early grammar. Parent-report data in CDI format from a sample of 1151 German-speaking children between 1;6 and 2;6 and longitudinal spontaneous speech data from 22 children between 1;8 and 2;5 were used. Regression analysis of the parent-report data indicates that grammatical words have a stronger influence on concurrent syntactic complexity than lexical words. Time-lagged correlations using the spontaneous speech data showed that lexical words at 1;8 predict subsequent MLU at 2;1 significantly; grammatical words do not. MLU at 2;5 is significantly predicted by grammatical words and no longer by lexical words. The influence of different grammatical subcategories on subsequent MLU varies. Use of articles and the copula at 2;1 most strongly predicts MLU at 2;5. Children use both types of articles and multiple determiners before a noun to the same extent as adults. The present results are suggestive of early grammatical structure building. KW - CDI KW - determiners KW - early syntax KW - German KW - grammatical words Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1177/0142723718761414 SN - 0142-7237 SN - 1740-2344 VL - 39 IS - 1 SP - 61 EP - 79 PB - Sage Publ. CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sperlich, Anja A1 - Schad, Daniel A1 - Laubrock, Jochen T1 - When preview information starts to matter BT - Development of the perceptual span in German beginning readers JF - Journal of cognitive psychology N2 - How is reading development reflected in eye-movement measures? How does the perceptual span change during the initial years of reading instruction? Does parafoveal processing require competence in basic word-decoding processes? We report data from the first cross-sectional measurement of the perceptual span of German beginning readers (n = 139), collected in the context of the large longitudinal PIER (Potsdamer Intrapersonale Entwicklungsrisiken/Potsdam study of intra-personal developmental risk factors) study of intrapersonal developmental risk factors. Using the moving-window paradigm, eye movements of three groups of students (Grades 1-3) were measured with gaze-contingent presentation of a variable amount of text around fixation. Reading rate increased from Grades 1-3, with smaller increases for higher grades. Perceptual-span results showed the expected main effects of grade and window size: fixation durations and refixation probability decreased with grade and window size, whereas reading rate and saccade length increased. Critically, for reading rate, first-fixation duration, saccade length and refixation probability, there were significant interactions of grade and window size that were mainly based on the contrast between Grades 3 and 2 rather than Grades 2 and 1. Taken together, development of the perceptual span only really takes off between Grades 2 and 3, suggesting that efficient parafoveal processing presupposes that basic processes of reading have been mastered. KW - Eye movements KW - German KW - Moving window KW - Perceptual span KW - Reading development Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/20445911.2014.993990 SN - 2044-5911 SN - 2044-592X VL - 27 IS - 5 SP - 511 EP - 530 PB - Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group CY - Abingdon ER - TY - THES A1 - Schunack, Silke T1 - Processing of non-canonical word orders in an L2 T1 - Verarbeitung von nichtkanonischen Wortfolgen in der L2 BT - when small changes make no big difference BT - wenn kleine Änderungen keine große Unterschiede machen N2 - This thesis investigates the processing of non-canonical word orders and whether non-canonical orders involving object topicalizations, midfield scrambling and particle verbs are treated the same by native (L1) and non-native (L2) speakers. The two languages investigated are Norwegian and German. 32 L1 Norwegian and 32 L1 German advanced learners of Norwegian were tested in two experiments on object topicalization in Norwegian. The results from the online self-paced reading task and the offline agent identification task show that both groups are able to identify the non-canonical word order and show a facilitatory effect of animate subjects in their reanalysis. Similarly high error rates in the agent identification task suggest that globally unambiguous object topicalizations are a challenging structure for L1 and L2 speakers alike. The same participants were also tested in two experiments on particle placement in Norwegian, again using a self-paced reading task, this time combined with an acceptability rating task. In the acceptability rating L1 and L2 speakers show the same preference for the verb-adjacent placement of the particle over the non-adjacent placement after the direct object. However, this preference for adjacency is only found in the L1 group during online processing, whereas the L2 group shows no preference for either order. Another set of experiments tested 33 L1 German and 39 L1 Slavic advanced learners of German on object scrambling in ditransitive clauses in German. Non-native speakers accept both object orders and show neither a preference for either order nor a processing advantage for the canonical order. The L1 group, in contrast, shows a small, but significant preference for the canonical dative-first order in the judgment and the reading task. The same participants were also tested in two experiments on the application of the split rule in German particle verbs. Advanced L2 speakers of German are able to identify particle verbs and can apply the split rule in V2 contexts in an acceptability judgment task in the same way as L1 speakers. However, unlike the L1 group, the L2 group is not sensitive to the grammaticality manipulation during online processing. They seem to be sensitive to the additional lexical information provided by the particle, but are unable to relate the split particle to the preceding verb and recognize the ungrammaticality in non-V2 contexts. Taken together, my findings suggest that non-canonical word orders are not per se more difficult to identify for L2 speakers than L1 speakers and can trigger the same reanalysis processes as in L1 speakers. I argue that L2 speakers’ ability to identify a non-canonical word order depends on how the non-canonicity is signaled (case marking vs. surface word order), on the constituents involved (identical vs. different word types), and on the impact of the word order change on sentence meaning. Non-canonical word orders that are signaled by morphological case marking and cause no change to the sentence’s content are hard to detect for L2 speakers. N2 - Diese Arbeit untersucht die Verarbeitung nichtkanonischer Wortfolgen und ob nichtkanonische Wortfolgen, die Objekttopikalisierung, Mittelfeldscrambling und Partikelverben beinhalten, von Muttersprachlern (L1) und Fremdsprachenlernern (L2) gleichermaßen verarbeitet werden. Die untersuchten Sprachen sind Norwegisch und Deutsch. 32 norwegische Muttersprachler und 32 fortgeschrittene deutsche Norwegischlerner wurden in zwei Experimenten zur Objekttopikalisierung im Norwegischen getestet. Die Resultate des Leseexperiments und der Agensidentifikation zeigen, dass beide Gruppen in der Lage sind die nichtkanonische Wortfolge zu identifizieren und einen fördernden Effekt von belebten Subjekten auf ihre Reanalyse zeigen. Ähnlich hohe Fehlerrate in der Agensidentifikation suggerieren, dass global unambige Objekttopikalisierungen eine anspruchsvolle Struktur für L1- und L2-Sprecher sind. Dieselben Teilnehmer wurden auch in zwei Experimenten zur Platzierung von Partikeln im Norwegischen getestet. Es wurde wieder ein Leseexperiment durchgeführt, diesmal zusammen mit einem Akzeptabilitätsrating. In diesem Rating zeigen L1- und L2-Sprecher die gleiche Präferenz für die verbnahe Platzierung der Partikel gegenüber der Platzierung nach dem direkten Objekt. Diese Präferenz findet sich im Leseexperiment nur in den Daten der L1-Gruppe, die L2-Gruppe zeigt dort keine Präferenz für eine der beiden Reihenfolgen. Eine weitere Gruppe Experimente testete 33 deutsche Muttersprachler und 39 fortgeschrittene slawische Deutschlerner zum Objektscrambling in deutschen ditransitiven Sätzen. Fremdsprachenlerner akzeptieren beide möglichen Reihenfolgen und zeigen keine Präferenz oder schnellere Verarbeitung für die kanonische Reihenfolge. Die L1-Gruppe zeigt eine numerisch kleine, aber signifikante Präferenz für die kanonische Dativ-Akkusativ-Folge im Akzeptabilitätsrating und dem Leseexperiment. Dieselben Teilnehmer wurden auch in zwei Experimenten zur Anwendung der Trennungsregel bei trennbaren Verben im Deutschen getestet. Fortgeschrittenen L2-Sprecher des Deutschen können trennbare Verben identifizieren und die Trennregel in V2-Kontexten wie dem Akzeptabilitätsrating genauso anwenden wie Muttersprachler. Allerdings zeigt die L2-Gruppe keine Sensibilität gegenüber der Grammatikalitätsmanipulation in der Leseaufgabe. Sie scheinen die zusätzliche lexikalische Information der Partikel wahrzunehmen, können jedoch getrennte Partikel nicht mit dem vorhergehenden Verb verbinden und die Ungrammatikalität der Trennung in Nicht-V2-Kontexten erkennen. Hierin unterscheiden sie sich von Mutterprachlern. Auf der Basis meiner Ergebnisse scheinen nichtkanonische Wortfolgen nicht per se schwieriger zu identifizieren zu sein für Fremdsprachlerner als für Muttersprachler und können dieselben Reanalyseprozesse auslösen. Ich argumentiere, dass die Fähigkeit von L2-Sprechern nichtkanonische Wortfolgen zu identifizieren davon abhängt, wie diese signalisiert werden (morphologische Kasusmarkierung vs. Oberflächenwordfolge), von den involvierten Konstituenten (gleiche vs. verschiedene Wortarten) und dem Einfluss der Änderung der Wortfolge auf die Satzbedeutung. Nichtkanonische Wortfolgen, die durch morphologische Kasusmarkierung signalisiert werden und keine Änderung der Satzbedeutung verursachen sind schwer zu identifizieren für Fremdsprachenlerner. KW - L2 sentence processing KW - object topicalization KW - scrambling KW - particle verbs KW - Norwegian KW - German KW - self-paced reading KW - acceptability judgments KW - Satzverarbeitung KW - Objekttopikalisierung KW - Scrambling KW - Partikelverben KW - Norwegisch KW - Leseexperiment KW - Akzeptabilitätsbewertung Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-103750 ER - TY - BOOK A1 - Schroeder, Christoph A1 - Schellhardt, Christin A1 - Akinci, Mehmet-Ali A1 - Dollnick, Meral A1 - Dux, Ginesa A1 - Gülbeyaz, Esin Işıl A1 - Jähnert, Anne A1 - Koç-Gültürk, Ceren A1 - Kühmstedt, Patrick A1 - Kuhn, Florian A1 - Mezger, Verena A1 - Pfaff, Carol A1 - Ürkmez, Betül Sena ED - Schroeder, Christoph ED - Schellhardt, Christin T1 - MULTILIT BT - manual, criteria of transcription and analysis for German, Turkish and English N2 - This paper presents an overview of the linguistic analyses developed in the MULTILIT project and the processing of the oral and written texts collected. The project investigates the language abilities of multilingual children and adolescents, in particular, those who have Turkish and/or Kurdish as a mother tongue. A further aim of the project is to examine from a psycholinguistic and sociolinguistic perspective the extent to which competence in academic registers is achieved on the basis of the languages spoken by the children, including the language(s) spoken at the home, the language of the country of residence and the first foreign language. To be able to examine these questions using corpus linguistic parameters, we created categories of analysis in MULTILIT. The data collection comprises texts from bilingual and monolingual children and adolescents in Germany in their first language Turkish, their second language German und their foreign language English. Pupils aged between nine and twenty years of age produced monologue oral and written texts in the two genres of narrative and discursive. On the basis of these samples, we examine linguistic features such as lexical expression (lexical density, lexical diversity), syntactic complexity (syntactic and discursive packaging) as well as phonology in the oral texts and orthography in the written texts, with the aim of investigating the pupils’ growing mastery of these features in academic and informal registers. To this end the raw data have been transcribed by the use of transcription conventions developed especially for the needs of the MULTILIT data. They are based on the commonly used HIAT and GAT transcription conventions and supplemented with conventions that provide additional information such as features at the graphic level. The categories of analysis comprise a large number of linguistic categories such as word classes, syntax, noun phrase complexity, complex verbal morphology, direct speech and text structures. We also annotate errors and norm deviations at a wide range of levels (orthographic, morphological, lexical, syntactic and textual). In view of the different language systems, these criteria are considered separately for all languages investigated in the project. N2 - Die vorliegende Arbeit stellt eine Übersicht der linguistischen Analysen dar, die im Rahmen des MULTILIT Projektes entwickelt wurden. Darüber hinaus wird die Aufbereitung der erhobenen mündlichen und schriftlichen Texte vorgestellt. Das Projekt betrachtet die sprachlichen Fähigkeiten multilingualer Kinder und Jugendlicher, insbesondere mit der Muttersprache Türkisch und/oder Kurdisch. Ein weiteres Ziel des Projektes ist die Untersuchung der Entwicklung eines akademischen Registers der Sprachen der Kinder, d.h. der zu Hause gesprochenen Sprache(n), der Sprache des Aufenthaltslandes und der ersten Fremdsprache unter psycholinguistischen und soziolinguistischen Gesichtspunkten. Zur Untersuchung dieser Forschungsfragen unter korpuslinguistischen Parametern wurden in MULTILIT Analysekriterien entwickelt. Die Datenerhebung umfasst Texte bilingualer und monolingualer Kinder und Jugendlicher in ihrer Erstsprache Türkisch, ihrer Zweitsprache Deutsch sowie ihrer ersten Fremdsprache Englisch. Schüler im Alter von 9 bis 20 Jahren haben sowohl mündliche als auch schriftliche monologische Texte in zwei Genres produziert – erzählend und erörternd. Basierend auf diese Daten untersuchen wir linguistische Bereiche wie lexikalischer Ausdruck (lexikalische Dichte, lexikalische Vielfalt), syntaktische Komplexität (syntaktische und diskursive Verdichtung) sowie Phonologie in den mündlichen Texten und Orthographie in den schriftlichen Texten mit dem Ziel, die wachsende Beherrschung dieser Bereiche in akademischen und informellen Registern durch die Schüler zu untersuchen. Dafür wurden die Rohdaten mit Transkriptionskonventionen verarbeitet, die speziell auf die Bedürfnisse des MULTILIT Projektes zugeschnitten sind. Sie basieren auf den weit verbreiteten Transkriptionskonventionen HIAT und GAT und wurden durch Konventionen erweitert, die zusätzliche Informationen, beispielsweise auf graphischer Ebene, festhalten. Die Analysekategorien umfassen zahlreiche linguistische Kategorien, wie Wortarten, Syntax, Nominalphrasenkomplexität, komplexe Verbalmorphologie, direkte Rede und Textstrukturen. Außerdem annotieren wir Fehler und Normabweichungen auf allen zahlreichen Ebenen (orthographisch, morphologisch, lexikalisch, syntaktisch und textuell). Aufgrund der verschiedenen Sprachsysteme werden diese Analysekategorien für alle im Projekt untersuchten Sprachen gesondert betrachtet. KW - bilingualism KW - child KW - German KW - German lessons KW - migration KW - multilingualism KW - second language KW - Turkish KW - writing ability KW - written language acquisition KW - DaZ KW - Deutsch KW - Deutschunterricht KW - Kind KW - Mehrsprachigkeit KW - Schreiben KW - Schreibfähigkeit KW - Schriftsprache KW - Schriftspracherwerb KW - Sprachförderung KW - Türkisch KW - Zweitsprache Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-80390 ER - TY - THES A1 - Schmitz, Michaela T1 - The perception of clauses in 6- and 8-month-old German-learning infants : influence of pause duration and the natural pause hierarchy T1 - Die Wahrnehmung von Clauses bei 6- und 8-Monate-alten Deutsch lernenden Kindern : der Einfluss von Pausendauer und der Natürlichen Pausenhierarchie N2 - The present dissertation focuses on the question whether and under which conditions infants recognise clauses in fluent speech and the role a prosodic marker such as a pause may have in the segmentation process. In the speech signal, syntactic clauses often coincide with intonational phrases (IPhs) (Nespor & Vogel, 1986, p. 190), the boundaries of which are marked by changes in fundamental frequency (e.g., Price, Ostendorf, Shattuck-Hufnagel & Fong, 1991), lengthening of the final syllable (e.g., Cooper & Paccia-Cooper, 1980) and the occurrence of a pause (Nespor & Vogel, 1986, p. 188). Thus, IPhs seem to be reliably marked in the speech stream and infants may use these cues to recognise them. Furthermore, corpus studies on the occurrence and distribution of pauses have revealed that there is a strong correlation between the duration of a pause and the type of boundary it marks (e.g., Butcher, 1981, for German). Pauses between words are either non-existent or short, pauses between phrases are a bit longer, and pauses between clauses and at sentence boundaries further increase in duration. This suggests the existence of a natural pause hierarchy that complements the prosodic hierarchy described by Nespor and Vogel (1986). These hierarchies on the side of the speech signal correspond to the syntactic hierarchy of a language. In the present study, five experiments using the Headturn preference paradigm (Hirsh-Pasek, Kemler Nelson, Jusczyk, Cassidy, Druss & Kennedy, 1987) were conducted to investigate German-learning 6- and 8-month-olds’ use of pauses to recognise clauses in the signal and their sensitivity to the natural pause hierarchy. Previous studies on English-learning infants’ recognition of clauses (Hirsh-Pasek et al., 1987; Nazzi, Kemler Nelson, Jusczyk & Jusczyk, 2000) have found that infants as young as 6 months recognise clauses in fluent speech. Recently, Seidl and colleagues have begun to investigate the status the pause may have in this process (Seidl, 2007; Johnson & Seidl, 2008; Seidl & Cristià, 2008). However, none of these studies investigated infants’ sensitivity to the natural pause hierarchy and especially the sensitivity to the correlation between pause durations and the respective within-sentence clause boundaries / sentence boundaries. To address these questions highly controlled stimuli were used. In all five experiments the stimuli were sentences consisting of two IPhs which each coincided with a syntactic clause. In the first three experiments pauses were inserted either at clause and sentence boundaries or within the first clause and the sentence boundaries. The duration of the pauses varied between the experiments. The results show that German-learning 6-month-olds recognise clauses in the speech stream, but only in a condition in which the duration of the pauses conforms to the mean duration of pauses found at the respective boundaries in German. Experiments 4 and 5 explicitly addressed the question of infants’ sensitivity to the natural pause hierarchy by inserting pauses at the clause and sentence boundaries only. Their durations were either conforming to the natural pause hierarchy or were being reversed. The results of these experiments provide evidence that 8-, but not 6-month-olds seem to be sensitive to the correlation of the duration of pauses and the type of boundary they demarcate. The present study provides first evidence that infants not only use pauses to recognise clause and sentence boundaries, but are sensitive to the duration and distribution of pauses in their native language as reflected in the natural pause hierarchy. N2 - Die vorliegende Dissertation geht der Frage nach, ob und ab wann Deutsch lernende Kinder in der Lage sind, Clauses in gesprochener Sprache zu erkennen und welche Rolle dabei ein prosodischer Marker wie die Pause spielen kann. Im Sprachstrom sind syntaktische Clauses oft durch Intonationsphrasen (IPhs) repräsentiert (Nespor & Vogel, 1986). Die Grenzen solcher IPhs werden markiert durch Veränderungen in der Grundfrequenz (z.B., Price, Ostendorf, Shattuck-Hufnagel & Fong, 1991), die Längung der grenzfinalen Silbe (z.B., Cooper & Paccia-Cooper, 1980) und das Vorhandensein einer Pause (Nespor & Vogel, 1986, p. 188). Man kann also davon ausgehen, dass die Grenzen von IPhs zuverlässig markiert sind und Kleinkinder diese Hinweisreize zu deren Wahrnehmung nutzen. Ein weiterer Hinweis ist die Dauer einer Pause, die systematisch mit der Art der Grenze korreliert an der sie vorkommt (z.B., Butcher, 1981, fürs Deutsche). Es finden sich kaum oder gar keine Pausen zwischen Wörtern, etwas längere Pausen an Phrasengrenzen, noch längere Pausen an Clausegrenzen und die längsten Pausen an Satzgrenzen. Das legt die Existenz einer Natürlichen Pausenhierarchie nahe, die die prosodische Hierarchie (Nespor & Vogel, 1986) auf der Seite des Sprachsignals ergänzt. Diese prosodischen Hierarchien korrespondieren mit der syntaktischen Hierarchie einer Sprache. In der vorliegenden Studie werden fünf Experimente präsentiert, die mittels der Headturn Preference Methode (Hirsh-Pasek, Kemler Nelson, Jusczyk, Cassidy, Druss & Kennedy, 1987) durchgeführt wurden. Die Fragestellung war, ob Deutsch lernende 6 und 8 Monate alte Kinder Pausen nutzen, um Clauses im Sprachstrom zu erkennen und ob sie bereits sensitiv für die natürliche Pausenhierarchie sind. Vorläuferstudien (Hirsh-Pasek et al., 1987; Nazzi, Kemler Nelson, Jusczyk & Jusczyk, 2000) haben gezeigt, dass bereits 6 Monate alte Englisch lernende Kinder Clauses in der Sprache erkennen. Erstmals haben Seidl und Mitarbeiterinnen (Seidl, 2007; Johnson & Seidl, 2008; Seidl & Cristià, 2008) den Status der Pause in diesem Zusammenhang näher untersucht. Keine der genannten Studien hat jedoch die Sensitivität von Kindern gegenüber der natürlichen Pausenhierarchie und besonders die Sensitivität gegenüber der Korrelation von Pausendauer und Clause-, bzw. Satzgrenzen erforscht. Um dieser Frage nachzugehen, wurde in der vorliegenden Studie ein hoch kontrolliertes Stimulusmaterial verwendet: Sätze die aus zwei IPhs bestehen, welche jeweils einem syntaktischen Clause entsprechen. In den ersten drei Experimenten wurden Pausen zum einen an den Clause- und den Satzgrenzen und zum anderen innerhalb der ersten Clauses und an den Satzgrenzen eingefügt. Die Dauer der Pausen variierte zwischen den Experimenten. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass 6 Monate alte Kinder in der Lage sind, Clauses in gesprochener Sprache zu erkennen, aber nur ein einer Bedingung, in der die eingefügten Pausen eine Dauer hatten, die mit der natürlichen Sprache übereinstimmte. In den Experimenten 4 und 5 wurde explizit getestet, inwieweit die Kinder sensitiv gegenüber der natürlichen Pausenhierarchie sind. Dafür wurden Pausen nur noch an den Clause- und den Satzgrenzen eingefügt, die jeweilige Dauer der Pausen entsprach dabei einmal der Pausenhierarchie, zum anderen widersprachen sie ihr. Die Ergebnisse der beiden Experimente zeigen, dass 8 Monate alte Kinder, nicht jedoch 6 Monate alte Kinder, sensitiv für die Verbindung von Pausendauer und der jeweiligen prosodisch/syntaktischen Grenze sind. Die Ergebnisse der Dissertation zeigen erstmals, dass Kinder Pausen nicht nur nutzen, um Clauses in gesprochener Sprache zu erkennen, sondern dass sie auch sensitiv gegenüber Pausendauer und Pausenverteilung in ihrer Muttersprache sind und damit gegenüber der Natürlichen Pausenhierarchie. KW - Clauses KW - Pausen KW - Natürliche Pausenhierarchie KW - Spracherwerb KW - Deutsch KW - Clauses KW - Pauses KW - Natural Pause Hierarchy KW - Language Acquisition KW - German Y1 - 2008 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-29078 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sauermann, Antje A1 - Höhle, Barbara T1 - Word order in German child language and child-directed speech BT - a corpus analysis on the ordering of double objects in the German middlefield JF - Glossa: A Journal of General Linguistics N2 - We report two corpus analyses to examine the impact of animacy, definiteness, givenness and type of referring expression on the ordering of double objects in the spontaneous speech of German-speaking two- to four-year-old children and the child-directed speech of their mothers. The first corpus analysis revealed that definiteness, givenness and type of referring expression influenced word order variation in child language and child-directed speech when the type of referring expression distinguished between pronouns and lexical noun phrases. These results correspond to previous child language studies in English (e.g., de Marneffe et al. 2012). Extending the scope of previous studies, our second corpus analysis examined the role of different pronoun types on word order. It revealed that word order in child language and child-directed speech was predictable from the types of pronouns used. Different types of pronouns were associated with different sentence positions but also showed a strong correlation to givenness and definiteness. Yet, the distinction between pronoun types diminished the effects of givenness so that givenness had an independent impact on word order only in child-directed speech but not in child language. Our results support a multi-factorial approach to word order in German. Moreover, they underline the strong impact of the type of referring expression on word order and suggest that it plays a crucial role in the acquisition of the factors influencing word order variation. KW - German KW - word order KW - corpus study KW - language acquisition KW - information structure KW - referring expression Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5334/gjgl.281 SN - 2397-1835 VL - 3 IS - 1 PB - Ubiquity Press LTD CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Sauermann, Antje A1 - Höhle, Barbara T1 - Word order in German child language and child-directed speech BT - A corpus analysis on the ordering of double objects in the German middlefield T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Humanwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - We report two corpus analyses to examine the impact of animacy, definiteness, givenness and type of referring expression on the ordering of double objects in the spontaneous speech of German-speaking two- to four-year-old children and the child-directed speech of their mothers. The first corpus analysis revealed that definiteness, givenness and type of referring expression influenced word order variation in child language and child-directed speech when the type of referring expression distinguished between pronouns and lexical noun phrases. These results correspond to previous child language studies in English (e.g., de Marneffe et al. 2012). Extending the scope of previous studies, our second corpus analysis examined the role of different pronoun types on word order. It revealed that word order in child language and child-directed speech was predictable from the types of pronouns used. Different types of pronouns were associated with different sentence positions but also showed a strong correlation to givenness and definiteness. Yet, the distinction between pronoun types diminished the effects of givenness so that givenness had an independent impact on word order only in child-directed speech but not in child language. Our results support a multi-factorial approach to word order in German. Moreover, they underline the strong impact of the type of referring expression on word order and suggest that it plays a crucial role in the acquisition of the factors influencing word order variation. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Humanwissenschaftliche Reihe - 687 KW - German KW - word order KW - corpus study KW - language acquisition KW - information structure KW - referring expression Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-470174 SN - 1866-8364 IS - 687 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Salzmann, Martin A1 - Wierzba, Marta A1 - Georgi, Doreen T1 - Condition C in German A'-movement BT - tackling challenges in experimental research on reconstruction JF - Journal of linguistics : JL N2 - In recent experimental work, arguments for or against Condition C reconstruction in A'-movement have been based on low/high availability of coreference in sentences with and without A'-movement. We argue that this reasoning is problematic: It involves arbitrary thresholds, and the results are potentially confounded by the different surface orders of the compared structures and non-syntactic factors. We present three experiments with designs that do not require defining thresholds of 'low' or 'high' coreference values. Instead, we focus on grammatical contrasts (wh-movement vs. relativization, subject vs. object wh-movement) and aim to identify and reduce confounds. The results show that reconstruction for A'-movement of DPs is not very robust in German, contra previous findings. Our results are compatible with the view that the surface order and non-syntactic factors (e.g. plausibility, referential accessibility of an R-expression) heavily influence coreference possibilities. Thus, the data argue against a theory that includes both reconstruction and a hard Condition C constraint. There is a residual contrast between sentences with subject/object movement, which is compatible with an account without reconstruction (and an additional non-syntactic factor) or an account with reconstruction (and a soft Condition C constraint). KW - A'-movement KW - binding KW - Condition C KW - experimental syntax KW - German KW - reconstruction KW - relative clauses KW - wh-questions Y1 - 2022 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022226722000214 SN - 0022-2267 SN - 1469-7742 VL - 59 IS - 3 SP - 577 EP - 622 PB - Cambridge Univ. Press CY - London [u.a.] ER - TY - THES A1 - Rettig, Anja T1 - Learning to read in German BT - eye movements and the perceptual span of German beginning readers and their relation to reading motivation BT - Blickbewegungen und die perzentuelle Lesespanne von deutschsprachigen Leseanfängern und der Zusammenhang zur Lesemotivation N2 - In the present dissertation, the development of eye movement behavior and the perceptual span of German beginning readers was investigated in Grades 1 to 3 (Study 1) and longitudinally within a one-year time interval (Study 2), as well as in relation to intrinsic and extrinsic reading motivation (Study 3). The presented results are intended to fill the gap of only sparse information on young readers’ eye movements and completely missing information on German young readers’ perceptual span and its development. On the other hand, reading motivation data have been scrutinized with respect to reciprocal effects on reading comprehension but not with respect to more immediate, basic cognitive processing (e.g., word decoding) that is indicated by different eye movement measures. Based on a longitudinal study design, children in Grades 1–3 participated in a moving window reading experiment with eye movement recordings in two successive years. All children were participants of a larger longitudinal study on intrapersonal developmental risk factors in childhood and adolescence (PIER study). Motivation data and other psychometric reading data were collected during individual inquiries and tests at school. Data analyses were realized in three separate studies that focused on different but related aspects of reading and perceptual span development. Study 1 presents the first cross-sectional report on the perceptual span of beginning German readers. The focus was on reading rate changes in Grades 1 to 3 and on the issue of the onset of the perceptual span development and its dependence on basic foveal reading processes. Study 2 presents a successor of Study 1 providing first longitudinal data of the perceptual span in elementary school children. It also includes information on the stability of observed and predicted reading rates and perceptual span sizes and introduces a new measure of the perceptual span based on nonlinear mixed-effects models. Another issue addressed in this study is the longitudinal between-group comparison of slower and faster readers which refers to the detection of developmental patterns. Study 3 includes longitudinal reading motivation data and investigates the relation between different eye movement measures including perceptual span and intrinsic as well as extrinsic reading motivation. In Study 1, a decelerated increase in reading rate was observed between Grades 1 to 3. Grade effects were also reported for saccade length, refixation probability, and different fixation duration measures. With higher grade, mean saccade length increased, whereas refixation probability, first-fixation duration, gaze duration, and total reading time decreased. Perceptual span development was indicated by an increase in window size effects with grade level. Grade level differences with respect to window size effects were stronger between Grades 2 and 3 than between Grades 1 and 2. These results were replicated longitudinally in Study 2. Again, perceptual span size significantly changed between Grades 2 and 3, but not between Grades 1 and 2 or Grades 3 and 4. Observed and predicted reading rates were found to be highly stable after first grade, whereas stability of perceptual span was only moderate for all grade levels. Group differences between slower and faster readers in Year 1 remained observable in Year 2 showing a pattern of stable achievement differences rather than a compensatory pattern. Between Grades 2 and 3, between-group differences in reading rate even increased resulting in a Matthew effect. A similar effect was observed for perceptual span development between Grades 3 and 4. Finally, in Study 3, significant relations between beginning readers’ eye movements and their reading motivation were observed. In both years of measurement, higher intrinsic reading motivation was related to more skilled eye movement patterns as indicated by short fixations, longer saccades, and higher reading rates. In Year 2, intrinsic reading motivation was also significantly and negatively correlated with refixation probability. These correlational patterns were confirmed in cross-sectional linear models controlling for grade level and reading amount and including both reading motivation measures, extrinsic and intrinsic motivation. While there were significant positive relations between intrinsic reading motivation and word decoding as indicated by the above stated eye movement measures, extrinsic reading motivation only predicted variance in eye movements in Year 2 (significant for fixation durations and reading rate), with a consistently opposite pattern of effects as compared to intrinsic reading motivation. Finally, longitudinal effects of Year 1 intrinsic reading motivation on Year 2 word decoding were observed for gaze duration, total reading time, refixation probability, and perceptual span within cross-lagged panel models. These effects were reciprocal because all eye movement measures significantly predicted variance in intrinsic reading motivation. Extrinsic reading motivation in Year 1 did not affect any eye movement measure in Year 2, and vice versa, except for a significant, negative relation with perceptual span. Concluding, the present dissertation demonstrates that largest gains in reading development in terms of eye movement changes are observable between Grades 1 and 2. Together with the observed pattern of stable differences between slower and faster readers and a widening achievement gap between Grades 2 and 3 for reading rate, these results underline the importance of the first year(s) of formal reading instruction. The development of the perceptual span lags behind as it is most apparent between Grades 2 and 3. This suggests that efficient parafoveal processing presupposes a certain degree of foveal reading proficiency (e.g., word decoding). Finally, this dissertation demonstrates that intrinsic reading motivation—but not extrinsic motivation—effectively supports the development of skilled reading. N2 - In der vorliegenden Dissertation wurde die Entwicklung der Blickbewegungen und der perzeptuellen Lesespanne von deutschsprachigen Leseanfängern in den Klassenstufen 1–3 im Querschnitt (Studie 1) als auch im Längsschnitt innerhalb eines Jahres (Studie 2) sowie hinsichtlich des Zusammenhangs mit der intrinsischen und der extrinsischen Lesemotivation (Studie 3) untersucht. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit stellen einen bedeutsamen empirischen Beitrag zur ansonsten verhältnismäßig eher spärlichen empirisch-experimentellen Forschung zur frühen Leseentwicklung dar und liefern erste Erkenntnisse über die perzeptuelle Spanne von jungen deutschsprachigen Lesern. Des Weiteren wurde Neuland betreten, indem Blickdaten im Zusammenhang mit Lesemotivationsdaten ausgewertet wurden. Während es umfangreiche Forschungsarbeiten zum reziproken Zusammenhang zwischen Lesemotivation und dem Leserverstehen gibt, ist kaum etwas zu wechselseitigen Lesemotivationseffekten in Bezug auf basale kognitive Prozesse (z.B. die Wort-Dekodierung), wie sie durch verschiedene Blickbewegungsmaße indiziert werden, bekannt. Auf Grundlage eines längsschnittlichen Untersuchungsdesigns nahmen Kinder der Klassenstufen 1–3 in zwei aufeinanderfolgenden Jahren an einem Moving-Window-Leseexperiment mit manipuliertem Text teil. Alle Kinder waren Teilnehmer einer größeren Längsschnittstudie zur Untersuchung von intrapersonellen Risikofaktoren im Kindes- und Jugendalter (PIER-Studie). In individuellen Befragungen und Testungen in den Schulen wurden u.a. auch Lesemotivations- und andere psychometrische Lesedaten erhoben. Die im Labor erfassten Blickdaten wurden zusammen mit diesen psychometrischen Daten im Rahmen von drei separaten Studien ausgewertet, die jeweils verschiedene, jedoch miteinander in Bezug stehende Aspekte der Lese- und Lesespannen-Entwicklung untersuchen. Studie 1 präsentiert einen ersten querschnittlichen Bericht zur perzeptuellen Lesespanne von deutschsprachigen Leseanfängern. Hierbei lag der Fokus auf Veränderungen der Leserate in den Klassenstufen 1–3 und auf der Frage, wann die Entwicklung der perzeptuellen Spanne beginnt und inwiefern diese Entwicklung von basalen fovealen Leseprozessen abhängig ist. Studie 2 stellt eine Folgeuntersuchung dar, die erste Längsschnittdaten zur Entwicklung der perzeptuellen Lesespanne bei Grundschulkindern liefert. Untersucht wurden desweiteren die Stabilität der beobachteten und vorhergesagten Leserate als auch der perzeptuellen Lesespanne. In diesem Zusammenhang wird ein neues Spannenmaß vorgestellt, welches auf nicht-linearen gemischten Modellen basiert. Eine weitere Fragestellung der Studie ist der längsschnittliche Gruppenvergleich von langsameren und schnelleren Lesern, welcher auf die Entdeckung von Entwicklungsmustern abzielt. Studie 3 inkludiert längsschnittliche Lesemotivatonsdaten und untersucht die Beziehung zwischen verschiedenen Blickbewegungsmaßen einschließlich der perzeptuellen Lesespanne und der intrinsischen als auch extrinsischen Lesemotivation unter Berücksichtigung der Lesehäufigkeit. In Hinblick auf die Leseentwicklung in Klassenstufe 1–3 wurde ein zwischen den Klassenstufen abnehmender sukzessiver Anstieg in der Leserate beobachtet. Klassenstufeneffekte wurden außerdem berichtet für die Sakkadenlänge, die Refixationswahrscheinlichkeit und für verschiedene Fixationsdauermaße. Mit höherer Klassenstufe stieg die mittlere Sakkadenlänge, wohingegen die Refixationswahrscheinlichkeit, die Dauer der ersten Fixation auf einem Wort, die Blickdauer im sogenannten First-Pass und die Gesamtlesedauer von Worten abnahmen. Die Entwicklung der perzeptuellen Lesespanne wurde ersichtlich durch einen Anstieg von Fenstergrößen-Effekten mit steigender Klassenstufe. Der Unterschied zwischen den Klassenstufen im Hinblick auf Fenstergrößen-Effekte war größer zwischen Klasse 2 und 3 als zwischen den Klassen 1 und 2. Diese Ergebnisse wurden längsschnittlich repliziert in Studie 2. Wieder zeigte sich ein signifikanter Unterschied in der perzeptuellen Lesespanne zwischen Klassenstufe 2 und 3, jedoch nicht zwischen Klassenstufe 1 und 2 oder Klassenstufe 3 und 4. Die beobachtete und die vorhergesagte Leserate waren hoch stabil jenseits der ersten Klasse, wohingegen für die perzeptuelle Lesespanne für alle Klassenstufen nur eine moderate Stabilität gefunden wurde. Gruppenunterschiede zwischen langsameren und schnelleren Lesern im ersten Untersuchungsjahr wurden auch im zweiten Untersuchungsjahr beobachtet. Dabei zeichnete sich ein Muster eher stabiler anstatt kompensatorischer Leistungsunterschiede ab. Zwischen Klassenstufe 2 und 3 gab es sogar einen Anstieg der Disparität zwischen den Gruppen für die Leserate. Es zeichnete sich also ein sogenannter Matthäus-Effekt ab. Ein ähnlicher Effekt wurde für die perzeptuelle Lesespanne zwischen Klassenstufe 3 und 4 beobachtet. Abschließend wurde in Studie 3 ein signifikanter Zusammenhang zwischen den Blickbewegungen von Leseanfängern und ihrer Lesemotivation gefunden. In beiden Erhebungsjahren, korrelierte eine höhere intrinsische Lesemotivation mit geübteren Blickbewegungsmustern, was sich in kürzeren Fixationen, längeren Sakkaden und höheren Leseraten zeigte sowie im zweiten Erhebungsjahr auch in kleineren Refixationswahrscheinlichkeiten. In querschnittlichen linearen Modellen erwies sich die intrinsiche Lesemotivation als signifikanter Prädiktor für die oben genannten Blickmaße, selbst wenn für Klassenstufe und Lesehäufigkeit kontrolliert wurde und beide Motivationsmaße, die intrinische und die extrinsische Motivation, gleichzeitig ins Modell aufgenommen wurden. Die extrinsische Lesemotivation erwies sich hingegen nur im zweiten Erhebungsjahr als signifikanter Prädiktor der verschiedenen Fixationsdauern und der Leserate, wobei das Effektmuster durchweg entgegengesetzt zu dem für die intrinsische Lesemotivation beobachteten war. Schließlich wurden in kreuzverzögerten Autoregressionsmodellen längsschnittliche Effekte der intrinisichen Lesemotivation auf verschiedene Blickbewegungsmaße (Blickdauer im First-Pass, Gesamtlesezeit, Refixationswahrscheinlichkeit und perzeptuelle Lesespanne) beobachet. Diese Effekte waren reziprok, da alle Blickbewegungsmaße auch signifikant Varianz in der intrinsischen Lesemotivation vorhergesagt haben. Im Gegensatz dazu gab es weder signifikante längsschnittliche Effekte der extrinsichen Lesemotivation auf das Blickverhalten noch in die Gegenrichtung signifikante Effekte von Blickbewegungsmaßen auf die extrinsische Lesemotivation, mit Ausnahme einer signifikanten negativen Beziehung zwischen der extrinsischen Lesemotivation und der Lesespanne. Zusammenfassend lassen sich folgende Erkenntnisse festhalten: Die aktuelle Dissertation zeigt auf, dass der größte Zuwachs bei der Leseentwicklung im Sinne von Blickbewegungsänderungen zwischen den Klassenstufen 1 und 2 zu beobachten ist. Zusammen mit dem beobachteten Muster zeitlich stabiler Gruppenunterschiede zwischen langsameren und schnelleren Lesern und dem größer werdenden Leistungsabstand zwischen Klassenstufe 2 und 3 für das Maß der Leserate unterstreichen die Ergebnisse die Bedeutsamkeit des (der) ersten Jahre(s) formaler Leseinstruktion. Die Entwicklung der perzeptuellen Lesespanne ist verzögert, da sie am deutlichsten zwischen den Klassenstufen 2 und 3 sichtbar wird. Dies legt die Schlussfolgerung nah, dass effiziente parafoveale Verarbeitung einen gewissen Grad an fovealer Lesefertigkeit (d.h. basale Wortdekodierfähigkeiten) erfordert. Schließlich liefert die aktuelle Dissertation auch empirische Belege dafür, dass die intrinsische—aber nicht die extrinsische—Lesemotivation effektiv die Leseentwicklung unterstützt. T2 - Lesen Lernen im Deutschen KW - eye movements KW - perceptual span KW - reading development KW - beginning readers KW - German KW - moving window KW - longitudinal study KW - reading motivation KW - Blickbewegungen KW - perzentuelle Lesespanne KW - Leseentwicklung KW - Leseanfänger KW - Deutsch KW - Moving Window KW - Längsschnittstudie KW - Lesemotivation Y1 - 2021 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Puebla Antunes, Cecilia A1 - Felser, Claudia T1 - Discourse Prominence and Antecedent MisRetrieval during Native and Non-Native Pronoun Resolution JF - Discours : revue de linguistique, psycholinguistique et informatique N2 - Previous studies on non-native (L2) anaphor resolution suggest that L2 comprehenders are guided more strongly by discourse-level cues compared to native (L1) comprehenders. Here we examine whether and how a grammatically inappropriate antecedent’s discourse status affects the likelihood of it being considered during L1 and L2 pronoun resolution. We used an interference paradigm to examine how the extrasentential discourse impacts the resolution of German object pronouns. In an eye-tracking-during-reading experiment we examined whether an elaborated local antecedent ruled out by binding Condition B would be mis-retrieved during pronoun resolution, and whether initially introducing this antecedent as the discourse topic would affect the chances of it being mis-retrieved. While both participant groups rejected the inappropriate antecedent in an offline questionnaire irrespective of its discourse prominence, their real-time processing patterns differed. L1 speakers initially mis-retrieved the inappropriate antecedent regardless of its contextual prominence. L1 Russian/L2 German speakers, in contrast, were affected by the antecedent’s discourse status, considering it only when it was discourse-new but not when it had previously been introduced as the discourse topic. Our findings show that L2 comprehenders are highly sensitive to discourse dynamics such as topic shifts, supporting the claim that discourse-level cues are more strongly weighted during L2 compared to L1 processing. KW - pronoun resolution KW - non-native sentence processing KW - discourse KW - prominence KW - interference KW - German KW - eye-movement monitoring Y1 - 2022 U6 - https://doi.org/10.4000/discours.11720 SN - 1963-1723 IS - 29 PB - Université de Paris-Sorbonne, Maion Recherche CY - Paris ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Petrone, Caterina A1 - Truckenbrodt, Hubert A1 - Wellmann, Caroline A1 - Holzgrefe-Lang, Julia A1 - Wartenburger, Isabell A1 - Höhle, Barbara T1 - Prosodic boundary cues in German BT - evidence from the production and perception of bracketed lists JF - Journal of phonetics N2 - This study investigates prosodic phrasing of bracketed lists in German. We analyze variation in pauses, phrase-final lengthening and f0 in speech production and how these cues affect boundary perception. In line with the literature, it was found that pauses are often used to signal intonation phrase boundaries, while final lengthening and f0 are employed across different levels of the prosodic hierarchy. Deviations from expectations based on the standard syntax-prosody mapping are interpreted in terms of task-specific effects. That is, we argue that speakers add/delete prosodic boundaries to enhance the phonological contrast between different bracketings in the experimental task. In perception, three experiments were run, in which we tested only single cues (but temporally distributed at different locations of the sentences). Results from identification tasks and reaction time measurements indicate that pauses lead to a more abrupt shift in listeners׳ prosodic judgments, while f0 and final lengthening are exploited in a more gradient manner. Hence, pauses, final lengthening and f0 have an impact on boundary perception, though listeners show different sensitivity to the three acoustic cues. KW - Prosodic boundary KW - Phrase-final lengthening KW - Pause KW - f0 peaks KW - Production KW - Perception KW - German Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wocn.2017.01.002 SN - 0095-4470 VL - 61 SP - 71 EP - 92 PB - Elsevier CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Peters, Friedrich Ernst T1 - Redensarten schlagen die Augen auf JF - Digitale Edition: Friedrich Ernst Peters N2 - In diesem durch Erlebnisse aus der Zeit seiner Kriegsgefangenschaft in Frankreich (1914-1920) inspirierten Text erläutert Peters die ursprüngliche Bedeutung der plattdeutschen Redensart „to Stock doon“ und der hochdeutschen Redensart „etwas auf dem Kerbholz haben“. KW - Deutsch KW - Niederdeutsch KW - Plattdeutsch KW - Phraseologie KW - German KW - Low German KW - phraseology Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-59626 PB - Universitätsverlag Potsdam CY - Potsdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Peters, Friedrich Ernst T1 - Jochen Pahl un de Subrekter JF - Digitale Edition : Friedrich Ernst Peters N2 - Humorvolle kleine Geschichte um einen naiven Bauern, der sich in der Stadt ein bisschen wichtig machen, „dick doon“ will und den sein Plattdeutsch dazu verleitet, den Begriff „Subrektor“ falsch zu verstehen. KW - Plattdeutsch KW - Niederdeutsch KW - Hochdeutsch KW - Bedeutung KW - Sozialer Aufstieg KW - Low German KW - German KW - meaning KW - advancement Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-59637 PB - Universitätsverlag Potsdam CY - Potsdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Patterson, Clare A1 - Felser, Claudia T1 - Delayed Application of Binding Condition C During Cataphoric Pronoun Resolution JF - Journal of Psycholinguistic Research N2 - Previous research has shown that during cataphoric pronoun resolution, the predictive search for an antecedent is restricted by a structure-sensitive constraint known as ‘Condition C’, such that an antecedent is only considered when the constraint does not apply. Evidence has mainly come from self-paced reading (SPR), a method which may not be able to pick up on short-lived effects over the timecourse of processing. This study investigates whether or not the active search mechanism is constrained by Condition C at all points in time during cataphoric processing. We carried out one eye-tracking during reading and a parallel SPR experiment, accompanied by offline coreference judgment tasks. Although offline judgments about coreference were constrained by Condition C, the eye-tracking experiment revealed temporary consideration of antecedents that should be ruled out by Condition C. The SPR experiment using exactly the same materials indicated, conversely, that only structurally appropriate antecedents were considered. Taken together, our results suggest that the application of Condition C may be delayed during naturalistic reading. KW - Sentence processing KW - Cataphora KW - Pronouns KW - Binding KW - German KW - Eye-movement monitoring KW - Self-paced reading Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10936-018-9613-4 SN - 0090-6905 SN - 1573-6555 VL - 48 IS - 2 SP - 453 EP - 475 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Paape, Dario A1 - Vasishth, Shravan T1 - Local Coherence and Preemptive Digging-in Effects in German JF - Language and speech N2 - SOPARSE predicts so-called local coherence effects: locally plausible but globally impossible parses of substrings can exert a distracting influence during sentence processing. Additionally, it predicts digging-in effects: the longer the parser stays committed to a particular analysis, the harder it becomes to inhibit that analysis. We investigated the interaction of these two predictions using German sentences. Results from a self-paced reading study show that the processing difficulty caused by a local coherence can be reduced by first allowing the globally correct parse to become entrenched, which supports SOPARSE’s assumptions. KW - Local coherence KW - digging-in effects KW - self-paced reading KW - SOPARSE KW - sentence processing KW - German Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1177/0023830915608410 SN - 0023-8309 SN - 1756-6053 VL - 59 SP - 387 EP - 403 PB - Sage Publ. CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Paape, Dario L. J. F. A1 - Vasishth, Shravan T1 - Local coherence and preemptive digging-in effects in German T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Humanwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - SOPARSE predicts so-called local coherence effects: locally plausible but globally impossible parses of substrings can exert a distracting influence during sentence processing. Additionally, it predicts digging-in effects: the longer the parser stays committed to a particular analysis, the harder it becomes to inhibit that analysis. We investigated the interaction of these two predictions using German sentences. Results from a self-paced reading study show that the processing difficulty caused by a local coherence can be reduced by first allowing the globally correct parse to become entrenched, which supports SOPARSE’s assumptions. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Humanwissenschaftliche Reihe - 417 KW - local coherence KW - digging-in effects KW - self-paced reading KW - SOPARSE KW - sentence processing KW - German Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-405337 IS - 417 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Paape, Dario L. J. F. T1 - Filling the Silence: Reactivation, not Reconstruction JF - Frontiers in psychology N2 - In a self-paced reading experiment, we investigated the processing of sluicing constructions ("sluices") whose antecedent contained a known garden path structure in German. Results showed decreased processing times for sluices with garden-path antecedents as well as a disadvantage for antecedents with non-canonical word order downstream from the ellipsis site. A post-hoc analysis showed the garden-path advantage also to be present in the region right before the ellipsis site. While no existing account of ellipsis processing explicitly predicted the results, we argue that they are best captured by combining a local antecedent mismatch effect with memory trace reactivation through reanalysis. KW - ellipsis processing KW - garden-path effect KW - German KW - retrieval KW - reconstruction KW - self-paced reading Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00027 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 7 PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER -