Institutes
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (46)
- Article (25)
- Book (22)
- Contribution to a Periodical (12)
- Part of Periodical (6)
- Magister's Thesis (5)
- magisterthesis (4)
- Conference Proceeding (3)
- Master's Thesis (1)
- Other (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (127)
Keywords
- Spracherwerb (4)
- Syntax (3)
- Contact-sheets (2)
- Deutsch als Zweitsprache (2)
- Direct Cinema (2)
- Dokumentarfilme (2)
- Filmgespräche (2)
- Gisela Tuchtenhagen (2)
- Klassifikation (2)
- Klaus Wildenhahn (2)
Institute
- Neuere Philologien (127)
- Präsidium (31)
- Evangelische Theologie (2)
- Geowissenschaften / Geographie (2)
- Katholische Theologie (2)
- Medizin (2)
- Philosophie und Geschichtswissenschaften (2)
- Psychologie und Sportwissenschaften (2)
- Universitätsbibliothek (2)
- Biowissenschaften (1)
- MPI für empirische Ästhetik (1)
- Schreibzentrum (1)
- Sprach- und Kulturwissenschaften (1)
In diesem Beitrag werden Spezifika der mit der qualitativen Inhaltsanalyse vorgenommenen Leserezeptionsforschung dargestellt. Der Schwerpunkt liegt auf dem literarischen Lesen. In Analysen von Textrezeptionszeugnissen, die zu literaturdidaktischen Forschungszwecken vorgenommen werden, ergibt sich eine doppelt-hermeneutische Herausforderung: Ziel ist es zu verstehen, was Leser_innen in Texten verstehen. Für den Analyseprozess folgen daraus spezifische Anforderungen: Erstens muss der Umfang der Kontexteinheit geklärt werden. Hier sind differenzierte Antworten notwendig, weil sich der gegebene Kontext im Leseprozess ständig verändert. Zweitens erfordert das Forschungsinteresse eine bestimmte Art von Kategorien, die in der Literatur als formal bzw. analytisch bezeichnet werden. Eine weitere Differenzierung zwischen strikt formalen und theoriebasiert formalen Kategorien wird hier vorgeschlagen. Drittens muss geklärt werden, ob die rekonstruierten Leseaktivitäten Prozesse sind, oder ob sie auf zugrunde liegende Dispositionen schließen lassen. Diese Anforderungen werden diskutiert und mit Lösungsansätzen versehen.
Two studies investigate the production and perception of speech chunks in Estonian. A corpus study examines to what degree the boundaries of syntactic constituents and frequent collocations influence the distribution of prosodic information in spontaneously spoken utterances. A perception experiment tests to what degree prosodic information, constituent structure, and collocation frequencies interact in the perception of speech chunks. Two groups of native Estonian speakers rated spontaneously spoken utterances for the presence of disjunctures, whilst listening to these utterances (N = 47) or reading them (N = 40). The results of the corpus study reveal a rather weak correspondence between the distribution of prosodic information and boundaries of the syntactic constituents and collocations. The results of the perception experiments demonstrate a strong influence of clause boundaries on the perception of prosodic discontinuities as prosodic breaks. Thus, the results indicate that there is no direct relationship between the semantico-syntactic characteristics of utterances and the distribution of prosodic information. The percept of a prosodic break relies on the rapid recognition of constituent structure, i.e. structural information.
Pitch peaks tend to be higher at the beginning of longer than shorter sentences (e.g., ‘A farmer is pulling donkeys’ vs ‘A farmer is pulling a donkey and goat’), whereas pitch valleys at the ends of sentences are rather constant for a given speaker. These data seem to imply that speakers avoid dropping their voice pitch too low by planning the height of sentence-initial pitch peaks prior to speaking. However, the length effect on sentence-initial pitch peaks appears to vary across different types of sentences, speakers and languages. Therefore, the notion that speakers plan sentence intonation in advance due to the limitations in low voice pitch leaves part of the data unexplained. Consequently, this study suggests a complementary cognitive account of length-dependent pitch scaling. In particular, it proposes that the sentence-initial pitch raise in long sentences is related to high demands on mental resources during the early stages of sentence planning. To tap into the cognitive underpinnings of planning sentence intonation, this study adopts the methodology of recording eye movements during a picture description task, as the eye movements are the established approximation of the real-time planning processes. Measures of voice pitch (Fundamental Frequency) and incrementality (eye movements) are used to examine the relationship between (verbal) working memory (WM), incrementality of sentence planning and the height of sentence-initial pitch peaks.
The standard view of the form-meaning interfaces, as embraced by the great majority of contemporary grammatical frameworks, consists in the assumption that meaning can be associated with grammatical form in a one-to-one correspondence. Under this view, composition is quite straightforward, involving concatenation of form, paired with functional application in meaning. In this book, we discuss linguistic phenomena across several grammatical sub-modules (morphology, syntax, semantics) that apparently pose a problem to the standard view, mapping out the potential for deviation from the ideal of one-to-one correspondences, and develop formal accounts of the range of phenomena. We argue that a constraint-based perspective is particularly apt to accommodate deviations from one-to-many correspondences, as it allows us to impose constraints on full structures (such as a complete word or the interpretation of a full sentence) instead of deriving such structures step by step.
Most of the papers in this volume are formulated in a particular constraint-based grammar framework, Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar. The contributions investigate how the lexical and constructional aspects of this theory can be combined to provide an answer to this question across different linguistic sub-theories.
The neural processing of speech and music is still a matter of debate. A long tradition that assumes shared processing capacities for the two domains contrasts with views that assume domain-specific processing. We here contribute to this topic by investigating, in a functional magnetic imaging (fMRI) study, ecologically valid stimuli that are identical in wording and differ only in that one group is typically spoken (or silently read), whereas the other is sung: poems and their respective musical settings. We focus on the melodic properties of spoken poems and their sung musical counterparts by looking at proportions of significant autocorrelations (PSA) based on pitch values extracted from their recordings. Following earlier studies, we assumed a bias of poem-processing towards the left and a bias for song-processing on the right hemisphere. Furthermore, PSA values of poems and songs were expected to explain variance in left- vs. right-temporal brain areas, while continuous liking ratings obtained in the scanner should modulate activity in the reward network. Overall, poem processing compared to song processing relied on left temporal regions, including the superior temporal gyrus, whereas song processing compared to poem processing recruited more right temporal areas, including Heschl's gyrus and the superior temporal gyrus. PSA values co-varied with activation in bilateral temporal regions for poems, and in right-dominant fronto-temporal regions for songs. Continuous liking ratings were correlated with activity in the default mode network for both poems and songs. The pattern of results suggests that the neural processing of poems and their musical settings is based on their melodic properties, supported by bilateral temporal auditory areas and an additional right fronto-temporal network known to be implicated in the processing of melodies in songs. These findings take a middle ground in providing evidence for specific processing circuits for speech and music in the left and right hemisphere, but simultaneously for shared processing of melodic aspects of both poems and their musical settings in the right temporal cortex. Thus, we demonstrate the neurobiological plausibility of assuming the importance of melodic properties in spoken and sung aesthetic language alike, along with the involvement of the default mode network in the aesthetic appreciation of these properties.