Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (44)
- Review (6)
- Part of Periodical (2)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (1)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
- Postprint (1)
Keywords
Institute
- Sozialwissenschaften (38)
- Institut für Ernährungswissenschaft (5)
- Department Erziehungswissenschaft (3)
- Department Psychologie (1)
- Dezernat 2: Studienangelegenheiten (1)
- Institut für Chemie (1)
- Institut für Geowissenschaften (1)
- Institut für Physik und Astronomie (1)
- Referat für Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit (1)
- Strukturbereich Kognitionswissenschaften (1)
Der vergessene Nestor
(2003)
Sentence comprehension requires the assignment of thematic relations between the verb and its noun arguments in order to determine who is doing what to whom. In some languages, such as English, word order is the primary syntactic cue. In other languages, such as German, case-marking is additionally used to assign thematic roles. During development children have to acquire the thematic relevance of these syntactic cues and weigh them against semantic cues. Here we investigated the processing of syntactic cues and semantic cues in 2- and 3-year-old children by analyzing their behavioral and neurophysiological responses. Case-marked subject-first and object-first sentences (syntactic cue) including animate and inanimate nouns (semantic cue) were presented auditorily. The semantic animacy cue either conflicted with or supported the thematic roles assigned by syntactic case-marking. In contrast to adults, for whom semantics did not interfere with case-marking, children attended to both syntactic and to semantic cues with a stronger reliance on semantic cues in early development. Children’s event-related brain potentials indicated sensitivity to syntactic information but increased processing costs when case-marking and animacy assigned conflicting thematic roles. These results demonstrate an early developmental sensitivity and ongoing shift towards the use of syntactic cues during sentence comprehension.
Daniel Lerner’s „The Passing of Traditional Society“ of 1958 is still one of the most famous American studies in the field of modernization research. This article gives a deeper insight into the background of the emergence of the study. The author describes Lerner’s theoretical and empirical work and its connection to the policy of his time. A classic today in modernization theory, Lerner’s study was initially merely a request for the Voice of America to investigate the use of media in the Middle Eastern region –modernization or development did not yet play a significant role. The article shows how the direction of the study changed from its original intention into a political opinion research and thus into a political propaganda tool.
Im Februar 2009 endet die Lehr- und Forschungstätigkeit von Günter C. Behrmann an der Universität Potsdam. Anlässlich seiner Emeritierung gibt das Zentrum für Lehrerbildung der Universität ausgewählte Aufsätze, die Günter C. Behrmann während seiner Potsdamer Zeit publiziert hat, heraus. Diese Aufsätze spiegeln seine Lehr- und Forschungsinteressen sowie sein Engagement in der universitären Selbstverwaltung, sie zeigen die Verbindung zwischen der Deutung einer historischen Lage und den Folgerungen, die Behrmann für die Lösung praktischer politisch-pädagogischer Probleme aus dieser Deutung erschloss. Lebenslauf und Schriftenverzeichnis ergänzen die Festschrift und öffnen den Blick für das Wirken und das wissenschaftliche Werk Günter C. Behrmanns in seiner Gesamtheit.