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This paper discusses the typology of focus structure types (variation of information structuring in the clause) and how information structure can be used to explain all of the word order patterns in Chinese without reference to grammatical relations.
Die moderne Gesellschaft ist von Veränderungen epistemischer und institutioneller Strukturmerkmale der Wissenschaft geprägt, die ihrerseits einen Wandel in anderen Bereichen der Gesellschaft auslösen. In diesem Zusammenhang – wie auch in der neuzeitlichen Wissenschaftsentwicklung überhaupt – kommt der Sprachlichkeit, dem Kulturphänomen "Wissenschaftssprache", eine eminente Rolle zu, etablierte sich doch in den letzten Jahrzehnten eine „linguistische Teildisziplin der Wissenschaftssprachforschung“ (vgl. KRETZENBACHER 1992: 1; HESS-LÜTTICH 1998). "Wissenschaft" scheint mir jedoch ein (interkultureller) Problembegriff zu sein, beispielsweise auch schon deswegen, da dieses Wort (samt seinen Ableitungen wie Wissenschaftler, wissenschaftlich, Wissenschaftlichkeit) stark kulturbedingt ist (vgl. CLYNE/KREUTZ 2003: 60); so korreliert etwa der deutsche Terminus Wissenschaft nicht mit dem englischen science etc. Das Englische kann zweifellos auf eine konkurrenzlose Karriere als wissenschaftliche Universalsprache zurückblicken: Wissenschaftler – auch deutschsprachige – bedienen sich bei der Veröffentlichung wichtiger Forschungsergebnisse zunehmend der englischen Sprache. Der Anteil der wissenschaftlichen Publikationen auf Englisch beträgt heute weltweit über 90 Prozent, während nur noch wenige Prozent des wissenschaftlichen Publikationsaufkommens deutschsprachig sind. Auch die Zahl der wissenschaftlichen Tagungen (selbst im deutschen Sprach- und Kulturraum), die ausschließlich Englisch als Konferenzsprache zulassen, nimmt stetig zu. Außerdem werden immer mehr Vorlesungen bzw. ganze Studiengänge an sonst deutschsprachigen Universitäten in Englisch angeboten. „Die Spitzenforschung spricht englisch“ – stellte der spätere Präsident der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Hubert Markl, bereits vor zwanzig Jahren lapidar fest (Quelle: DUZ, 22/2002, S. 12). Gleichwohl wird immer wieder – oft etwas euphorisch – auf Ostmittel-, Ost- und Südosteuropa verwiesen, die traditionell als ein Refugium des Deutschen u.a. auch als Wissenschaftssprache galten bzw. auf weiten Strecken nach wie vor gelten. So kann exemplarisch die „Physikalische Zeitschrift der Sowjetunion“ erwähnt werden, die von 1932 bis 1937 auf Deutsch erschien. In diesem interessanten und zugleich äußerst komplexen Spannungsfeld soll es sich im vorliegenden Beitrag um das Thema ‘Sprachen in den Wissenschaften’ als Denk- und Darstellungsmedia handeln. Dabei soll zum einen die Problematik der Mehrsprachigkeit der Wissenschaften (mit besonderer Berücksichtigung des Deutschen) im mehrsprachigen, multikulturellen und kultursensiblen Kontaktraum Mittel- und Osteuropa angesprochen werden, zum anderen – weil ja auf unserer Tagung auch andere Teilareale, wie z.B. Rumänien, vertreten sind – soll der besondere Schwerpunkt auf Ungarn liegen. Hauptziel der Erörterungen besteht darin, die Entwicklung der in dieser Region wirksamen Wissenschaftssprachen diachron herauszuarbeiten, den derzeitigen Stand für die Bereiche Sprachen in der akademischen Lehre, Forschungssprachen (d.h. Sprachen der Forschungskommunikation) und Publikationssprachen – auch mit Hilfe empirischer Daten – mehrperspektivisch zu dokumentieren und aktuelle Tendenzen reflektorisch aufzuzeigen.
Fronting of an infinite VP across a finite main verb - akin to German "VP-topicalization" - can be found also in Czech and Polish. The paper discusses evidence from large corpora for this process and some of its properties, both syntactic and information-structural. Based on this case, criteria for more user-friedly searching and retrieval of corpus data in syntactic research are being developed.
The contribution of von Kempelen's "Mechanism of Speech" to the 'phonetic sciences' will be analyzed with respect to his theoretical reasoning on speech and speech production on the one hand and on the other in connection with his practical insights during his struggle in constructing a speaking machine. Whereas in his theoretical considerations von Kempelen's view is focussed on the natural functioning of the speech organs – cf. his membraneous glottis model – in constructing his speaking machine he clearly orientates himself towards the auditory result – cf. the bag pipe model for the sound generator used for the speaking machine instead. Concerning vowel production his theoretical description remains questionable, but his practical insight that vowels and speech sounds in general are only perceived correctly in connection with their surrounding sounds – i.e. the discovery of coarticulation – is clearly a milestone in the development of the phonetic sciences: He therefore dispenses with the Kratzenstein tubes, although they might have been based on more thorough acoustic modelling.
Finally, von Kempelen's model of speech production will be discussed in relation to the discussion of the acoustic nature of vowels afterwards [Willis and Wheatstone as well as von Helmholtz and Hermann in the 19th century and Stumpf, Chiba & Kajiyama as well as Fant and Ungeheuer in the 20th century].
Die deutsche Präposition-Artikel-Enklise bietet wie kaum eine andere Grammatikalisierung Einblicke in den Mikrobereich von Grammatikalisierungsprozessen: Klare, "zielorientierte" Verhältnisse sind hier nicht zu beschreiben, was der Grund für ihre bisher so geringe Beachtung durch die Grammatikalisierungsforschung sein dürfte. Es wurde deutlich, dass bezüglich der hier als zentral bewerteten Morphologisierung des Artikels das gesamte Spektrum von Nichtverschmelzbarkeit bis hin zu (kurz vor Flexiven stehenden) obligatorisch verschmelzenden speziellen Klitika abgedeckt ist. Diachron hat sich zwar insgesamt eine deutliche Rechtsdrift auf der Grammatikalisierungsskala vollzogen; bezüglich des Genitivartikels hat jedoch eine Degrammatikalisierung in Form von sog. retraction (gemäß Hapelmath 2004) stattgefunden, die hier in einer Demorphologisierung (Resyntaktisierung) eines Klitikons besteht. Dabei findet keine "Relexikalisierung" im Sinne einer lexikalischen Anreicherung eines bereits grammatikalisierten Elements statt (siehe hierzu Haspelmath 1999). Mittel- und frühneuhochdeutsche Verschriftungen deuten auf reichere Inventare an Verschmelzungs formen hin, doch sind hierzu diachrone Untersuchungen erforderlich. Ebenso ist der Übergangsbereich zwIschen einfachen und speziellen Klitika in sich abgestuft und weitaus komplexer gestaltet als hier dargestellt. Auch dazu besteht Bedarf an Detailanalysen unter der Fragestellung, welche der unter Abschnitt 2.2 aufgeführten Artikelfunkttonen am ehesten eine Präposition-Artikel-Verschmelzung erfordern. Einiges deutet auf den am stärksten desemantisierten (expletiven) Artikel z.B. vor Eigennamen hin. Um den Einfluss von Schriftlichkeit und Standardisierung auf Grammatikalisierungsprozesse ermitteln zu können, wurden zwei Dialekte in den Blick genommen: das Ruhrdeutsche, das die Erwartung nach deutlich fortgeschritteneren Verhältnissen erfüllt, und das Alemannische, das andere Phänomene ausgebildet hat wie etwa die Proklise des Artikels an das Substantiv, die Nullrealisierung klitischer Artikelformen und den kategorialen Umbau der vier Nominalkategorien am Artikel. Die Einbeziehung weiterer Dialekte und vor allem auch der gesprochenen "Umgangssprache" könnte weiteren Aufschluss über die Ratio dieser Grammatikalisierung liefern. Sollten flektierende Präpositionen Ziel dieses Wandels sein, so hätte dies tiefgreifende Konsequenzen für die Grammatikschreibung.
This paper describes the creation and preparation of TUSNELDA, a collection of corpus data built for linguistic research. This collection contains a number of linguistically annotated corpora which differ in various aspects such as language, text sorts / data types, encoded annotation levels, and linguistic theories underlying the annotation. The paper focuses on this variation on the one hand and the way how these heterogeneous data are integrated into one resource on the other hand.
Typology and complexity
(2005)
For the Workshop I was asked to talk about complexity in language from a typological perspective. My way of approaching this topic was to ask myself some questions, and then see where the answers led. The first one was of course, "What sort of system are we looking at complexity in - what kind of system is language?"
This paper summarizes our research efforts in functional modelling of the relationship between the acoustic properties of vowels and perceived vowel quality. Our model is trained on 164 short steady-state stimuli. We measured F1, F2, and additionally F0 since the effect of F0 on perceptual vowel height is evident. 40 phonetically skilled subjects judged vowel quality using the Cardinal Vowel diagram. The main focus is on refining the model and describing its transformation properties between the F1/F2 formant chart and the Cardinal Vowel diagram. An evaluation of the model based on 48 additional vowels showed the generalizability of the model and confirmed that it predicts perceived vowel quality with sufficient accuracy.
This paper describes the processing of MRI and CT images needed for developing a 3D linear articulatory model of velum. The 3D surface that defines each organ constitutive of the vocal and nasal tracts is extracted from MRI and CT images recorded on a subject uttering a corpus of artificially sustained French vowels and consonants. First, the 2D contours of the organs have been manually extracted from the corresponding images, expanded into 3D contours, and aligned in a common 3D coordinate system. Then, for each organ, a generic mesh has been chosen and fitted by elastic deformation to each of the 46 3D shapes of the corpus. This has finally resulted in a set of organ surfaces sampled with the same number of 3D vertices for each articulation, which is appropriate for Principal Component Analysis or linear decomposition. The analysis of these data has uncovered two main uncorrelated articulatory degrees of freedom for the velum's movement. The associated parameters are used to control the model. We have in particular investigated the question of a possible correlation between jaw / tongue and velum's movement and have not find more correlation than the one found in the corpus.
The semantics of ellipsis
(2005)
There are four phenomena that are particularly troublesome for theories of ellipsis: the existence of sloppy readings when the relevant pronouns cannot possibly be bound; an ellipsis being resolved in such a way that an ellipsis site in the antecedent is not understood in the way it was there; an ellipsis site drawing material from two or more separate antecedents; and ellipsis with no linguistic antecedent. These cases are accounted for by means of a new theory that involves copying syntactically incomplete antecedent material and an analysis of silent VPs and NPs that makes them into higher order definite descriptions that can be bound into.
Articulatory token-to-token variability not only depends on linguistic aspects like the phoneme inventory of a given language but also on speaker specific morphological and motor constraints. As has been noted previously (Perkell (1997), Mooshammer et al. (2004)), speakers with coronally high "domeshaped" palates exhibit more articulatory variability than speakers with coronally low "flat" palates. One explanation for that is based on perception oriented control by the speaker. The influence of articulatory variation on the cross sectional area and consequently on the acoustics should be greater for flat palates than for domeshaped ones. This should force speakers with flat palates to place their tongue very precisely whereas speakers with domeshaped palates might tolerate a greater variability. A second explanation could be a greater amount of lateral linguo-palatal contact for flat palates holding the tongue in position. In this study both hypotheses were tested.
In order to investigate the influence of the palate shape on the variability of the acoustic output a modelling study was carried out. Parallely, an EPG experiment was conducted in order to investigate the relationship between palate shape, articulatory variability and linguo-palatal contact.
Results from the modelling study suggest that the acoustic variability resulting from a certain amount of articulatory variability is higher for flat palates than for domeshaped ones. Results from the EPG experiment with 20 speakers show that (1.) speakers with a flat palate exhibit a very low articulatory variability whereas speakers with a domeshaped palate vary, (2.) there is less articulatory variability if there is lots of linguo-palatal contact and (3.) there is no relationship between the amount of lateral linguo-palatal contact and palate shape. The results suggest that there is a relationship between token-to-token variability and palate shape, however, it is not that the two parameters correlate, but that speakers with a flat palate always have a low variability because of constraints of the variability range of the acoustic output whereas speakers with a domeshaped palate may choose the degree of variability. Since linguo-palatal contact and variability correlate it is assumed that linguo-palatal contact is a means for reducing the articulatory variability.
A survey of 170 Tibeto-Burman languages showed 69 with a distinction between inclusive and exclusive first-person plural pronouns, 18 of which also show inclusive- exclusive in Idual. Only the Kiranti languages and some Chin languages have inclusive-exclusive in the person marking. Of the forms of the pronouns involved in the inclusive-exclusive opposition, usually the exclusive form is less marked and historically prior to the inclusive form, and we find the distinction cannot be reconstructed to Proto-Tibeto-Burman or to mid level groupings. Qnly the Kiranti group has marking of the distinction that can be reconstructed to the proto level, and this is also reflected in the person-marking system.
Syllable cut is said to be a phonologically distinctive feature in some languages where the difference in vowel quantity is accompanied by a difference in vowel quality like in German. There have been several attempts to find the corresponding phonetic correlates for syllable cut, from which the energy measurements of vowels by Spiekermann (2000) proved appropriate for explaining the difference between long, i.e. smoothly, and short, i.e. abruptly cut, vowels: in smoothly cut vowels, a larger number of peaks was counted in the energy contour which were located further back than in abruptly cut segments, and the overall energy was more constant throughout the entire nucleus. On this basis, we intended to compare German as a syllable cut language and Hungarian where the feature was not expected to be relevant. However, the phonetic correlates of syllable cut found in this study do not entirely confirm Spiekermann's results. It seems that the energy features of vowels are more strongly connected to their duration than to their quality.
Face-to-face communication is multimodal. In unscripted spoken discourse we can observe the interaction of several “semiotic layers”, modalities of information such as syntax, discourse structure, gesture, and intonation. We explore the role of gesture and intonation in structuring and aligning information in spoken discourse through a study of the co-occurrence of pitch accents and gestural apices. Metaphorical spatialization through gesture also plays a role in conveying the contextual relationships between the speaker, the government and other external forces in a naturally-occurring political speech setting.
Elke Kasimir´s paper (in this volume) argues against employing the notion of Givenness in the explanation of accent assignment. I will claim that the arguments against Givenness put forward by Kasimir are inconclusive because they beg the question of the role of Givenness. It is concluded that, more generally, arguments against Givenness as a diagnostic for information structural partitions should not be accepted offhand, since the notion of Givenness of discourse referents is (a) theoretically simple, (b) readily observable and quantifiable, and (c) bears cognitive significance.
Low- dimensional and speaker-independent linear vocal tract parametrizations can be obtained using the 3-mode PARAFAC factor analysis procedure first introduced by Harshman et al. (1977) and discussed in a series of subsequent papers in the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America (Jackson (1988), Nix et al. (1996), Hoole (1999), Zheng et al. (2003)). Nevertheless, some questions of importance have been left unanswered, e.g. none of the papers using this method has provided a consistent interpretation of the terms usually referred to as "speaker weights". This study attempts an exploration of what influences their reliability as a first step towards their consistent interpretation. With this in mind, we undertook a systematic comparison of the classical PARAFAC1 algorithm with a relaxed version, of it, PARAFAC2. This comparison was carried out on two different corpora acquired by the articulograph, which varied in vowel qualities, consonantal contexts, and the paralinguistic features accent and speech rate. The difference between these statistical approaches can grossly be described as follows: In PARAFAC1, observation units pertain to the same set of variables and the observation units are comparable. In PARAFAC2, observations pertain to the same set of variables, but observation units are not comparable. Such a situation can be easily conceived in a situation such as we are describing: The operationalization we took relies on the comparability of fleshpoint data acquired from different speakers, which need not be a good assumption due to influences like sensor placement and morphological conditions.
In particular, the comparison between the two different approaches is carried out by means of so-called "leverages" on different component matrices originating in regression analysis, calculated as v = diag(A(A A)−1A ) and delivering information on how "influential" a particular loading matrix is for the model. This analysis could potentially be carried out component by component, but we confined ourselves to effects on the global factor structure. For vowels, the most influential loadings are those for the tense cognates of non-palatal vowels. For speakers, the most prominent result is the relative absence of effects of the paralinguistic variables. Results generally indicate that there is quite little influence of the model specification (i.e. PARAFAC1 or PARAFAC2) on vowel and subject components. The patterns for the articulators indicate that there are strong differences between speakers with respect to the most influential measurement as revealed by PARAFAC2: In particular, the most influential y-contribution is the tongue-back for some talkers and the tongue-dorsum for other speakers. With respect to the speaker weights, again, the leverage patterns are very similar for both PARAFAC-versions. These patterns converge with the results of the loading plots, where the articulator profiles seem to be most altered by the use of PARAFAC2. These findings, in general, are interpreted as evidence for the reliability of the PARAFAC1 speaker weights.
This paper discusses the use of XSLT stylesheets as a filtering mechanism for refining the results of user queries on treebanks. The discussion is within the context of the TIGER treebank, the associated search engine and query language, but the general ideas can apply to any search engine for XML-encoded treebanks. It will be shown that important classes of linguistic phenomena can be accessed by applying relatively simple XSLT templates to the output of a query, effectively simulating the universal quantifier for a subset of the query language.
In order to investigate the empirical properties of focus, it is necessary to diagnose focus (or: “what is focused”) in particular linguistic examples. It is often taken for granted that the application of one single diagnostic tool, the so-called question-answer test, which roughly says that whatever a question asks for is focused in the answer, is a fool-proof test for focus. This paper investigates one example class where such uncritical belief in the question-answer test has led to the assumption of rather complex focus projection rules: in these examples, pitch accent placement has been claimed to depend on certain parts of the focused constituents being given or not. It is demonstrated that such focus projection rules are unnecessarily complex and in turn require the assumption of unnecessarily complicated meaning rules, not to speak of the difficulties to give a precise semantic/pragmatic definition of the allegedly involved givenness property. For the sake of the argument, an alternative analysis is put forward which relies solely on alternative sets following Mats Rooth´s work, and avoids any recourse to givenness. As it turns out, this alternative analysis is not only simpler but also makes in a critical case the better predictions.