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"Hey, was geht?". Beobachtungen zum Wandel und zur Differenzierung von Begrüßungsformen Jugendlicher
(2015)
Cybermobbing ist der gezielte Versuch, online das Face einer anderen Person zu dekonstruieren. Etwa ein Drittel aller Jugendlichen ist schon mindestens einmal mit diesem Problem konfrontiert worden. Seinen temporären Höhepunkt erreichte es mit dem Erscheinen der Internetseite Isharegossip.com (ISG). Diese entwickelte sich sehr schnell zu einer regelrechten Mobbing-Plattform. Täter fanden hier ganz besonders drastische verbale Mittel, um ihre Opfer zu kompromittieren. Bislang wurde noch nicht qualitativ analysiert, inwieweit Opfer und sogenannte virtuelle Zaungäste auf diese Verbalattacken reagieren. Ziel des Aufsatzes ist es, anhand eines typischen Diskurses sechs Verteidigungsstrategien aufzuzeigen, die von Opfern aber auch von sogenannten virtuellen Zaungästen angewandt werden, um das Face des Opfers zu rekonstruieren und zu stabilisieren.
Der Beitrag strebt an, Kategorien der bisher an der Ausgestaltung methodischer und theoretischer Zugänge zu Gedächtniskonzepten beteiligten Kulturwissenschaften einerseits, die Anschlussfähigkeit der bisher nicht beteiligten Linguistik andererseits im Sinn eines integrierten kulturanalytischen Ansatzes reflektieren und exemplarisch zu prüfen.
Ph@ttSessionz and Deutsch heute are two large German speech databases. They were created for different purposes: Ph@ttSessionz to test Internet-based recordings and to adapt speech recognizers to the voices of adolescent speakers, Deutsch heute to document regional variation of German. The databases differ in their recording technique, the selection of recording locations and speakers, elicitation mode, and data processing.
In this paper, we outline how the recordings were performed, how the data was processed and annotated, and how the two databases were imported into a single relational database system. We present acoustical measurements on the digit items of both databases. Our results confirm that the elicitation technique affects the speech produced, that f0 is quite comparable despite different recording procedures, and that large speech technology databases with suitable metadata may well be used for the analysis of regional variation of speech.
In this paper, a method for measuring synchronic corpus (dis-)similarity put forward by Kilgarriff (2001) is adapted and extended to identify trends and correlated changes in diachronic text data, using the Corpus of Historical American English (Davies 2010a) and the Google Ngram Corpora (Michel et al. 2010a). This paper shows that this fully data-driven method, which extracts word types that have undergone the most pronounced change in frequency in a given period of time, is computationally very cheap and that it allows interpretations of diachronic trends that are both intuitively plausible and motivated from the perspective of information theory. Furthermore, it demonstrates that the method is able to identify correlated linguistic changes and diachronic shifts that can be linked to historical events. Finally, it can help to improve diachronic POS tagging and complement existing NLP approaches. This indicates that the approach can facilitate an improved understanding of diachronic processes in language change.
Feedback utterances are among the most frequent in dialogue. Feedback is also a crucial aspect of linguistic theories that take social interaction, involving language, into account. This paper introduces the corpora and datasets of a project scrutinizing this kind of feedback utterances in French. We present the genesis of the corpora (for a total of about 16 hours of transcribed and phone force-aligned speech) involved in the project. We introduce the resulting datasets and discuss how they are being used in on-going work with focus on the form-function relationship of conversational feedback. All the corpora created and the datasets produced in the framework of this project will be made available for research purposes.
Abstufung
(2015)
Abtönung
(2015)
Hierarchical predictive coding has been identified as a possible unifying principle of brain function, and recent work in cognitive neuroscience has examined how it may be affected by age–related changes. Using language comprehension as a test case, the present study aimed to dissociate age-related changes in prediction generation versus internal model adaptation following a prediction error. Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were measured in a group of older adults (60–81 years; n = 40) as they read sentences of the form “The opposite of black is white/yellow/nice.” Replicating previous work in young adults, results showed a target-related P300 for the expected antonym (“white”; an effect assumed to reflect a prediction match), and a graded N400 effect for the two incongruous conditions (i.e. a larger N400 amplitude for the incongruous continuation not related to the expected antonym, “nice,” versus the incongruous associated condition, “yellow”). These effects were followed by a late positivity, again with a larger amplitude in the incongruous non-associated versus incongruous associated condition. Analyses using linear mixed-effects models showed that the target-related P300 effect and the N400 effect for the incongruous non-associated condition were both modulated by age, thus suggesting that age-related changes affect both prediction generation and model adaptation. However, effects of age were outweighed by the interindividual variability of ERP responses, as reflected in the high proportion of variance captured by the inclusion of by-condition random slopes for participants and items. We thus argue that – at both a neurophysiological and a functional level – the notion of general differences between language processing in young and older adults may only be of limited use, and that future research should seek to better understand the causes of interindividual variability in the ERP responses of older adults and its relation to cognitive performance.
Physische oder psychische Schädigung und die Erfahrung von Hilflosigkeit sind zwei Grundvoraussetzungen für Traumatisierung. Hilflosigkeit ist ein Zustand extrem reduzierter Agency im Angesicht von Gefahr und drohender Schädigung. Wenn Erzähler Gewalterfahrungen darstellen, beinhaltet dies nicht nur die Darstellung reduzierter Agency, sondern auch die Auseinandersetzung damit, wie Gewalt motiviert war: Wer war verantwortlich für die Gewaltausübung? Wie schuldhaft war sie? Gab das erzählte Selbst Anlass zu gewalttätigen Reaktionen? Da Fragen nach Verantwortung, Schuld und Absicht zentral für das Erleben und die Bewältigung von Gewalterfahrungen sind, ist die Frage, wie Agency zugeschrieben wird, grundlegend für die Analyse von Erzählungen traumatischer Gewalterfahrungen. Lucius-Hoene (2012) hat aufgezeigt, dass Agency im Erzählen auf verschiedenen Ebenen relevant wird. Die vorliegende Untersuchung befasst sich mit der Ebene der narrativen Darstellung der Gewalterfahrung, d.h. der Darstellung von Opfer- und Täterschaft, Macht und Hilflosigkeit, Schuld und Rechtfertigung von Gewalt. Nach einer kurzen Einführung in soziologische, philosophische und linguistische Konzepte von Agency werden zwei Typen von Erzählungen physischer Gewalterfahrungen kontrastiert. Die Untersuchung konzentriert sich auf die narrativen Praktiken der Zuschreibung von Schuld und Verantwortung.
This paper presents a dictionary writing system developed at the Institute for the German Language in Mannheim (IDS) for an ongoing international lexicographical project that traces the way of German loanwords in the East Slavic languages Russian, Belarusian and Ukrainian that were possibly borrowed via Polish. The results will be published in the Lehnwortportal Deutsch (LWP, lwp.ids-mannheim.de), a web portal for loanword dictionaries with German as the common donor language. The system described here is currently in use for excerpting data from a large range of historical and contemporary East Slavic monolingual dictionaries. The paper focuses on the tools that help in merging excerpts that are etymologically related to one and the same Polish etymon. The merging process involves eliminating redundancies and inconsistencies and, above all, mapping word senses of excerpted entries onto a common cross-language set of ‘metasenses’. This mapping may involve literally hundreds of excerpted East Slavic word senses, including quotations, for one ‘underlying’ Polish etymon.
This paper discusses computational linguistic methods for the semi-automatic analysis of modality interdependencies (the combination of complex resources such as speaking, writing, and visualizing; MID) in professional crosssituational interaction settings. The overall purpose of the approach is to develop models, methods, and a framework for the description and analysis of MID forms and functions. The paper describes work in progress—the development of an annotation framework that allows annotating different data and file formats at various levels, to relate annotation levels and entries independently of the given file format, and to visualize patterns.
Feedback utterances are among the most frequent in dialogue. Feedback is also a crucial aspect of all linguistic theories that take social interaction involving language into account. However, determining communicative functions is a notoriously difficult task both for human interpreters and systems. It involves an interpretative process that integrates various sources of information. Existing work on communicative function classification comes from either dialogue act tagging where it is generally coarse grained concerning the feed- back phenomena or it is token-based and does not address the variety of forms that feed- back utterances can take. This paper introduces an annotation framework, the dataset and the related annotation campaign (involving 7 raters to annotate nearly 6000 utterances). We present its evaluation not merely in terms of inter-rater agreement but also in terms of usability of the resulting reference dataset both from a linguistic research perspective and from a more applicative viewpoint.
Der valenztheoretischen Behandlung von Argumentstrukturen stehen seit längerer Zeit konstruktionsgrammatische Theorien gegenüber, die die syntaktisch-semantischen Konstruktionen selbst als primäre Objekte der Sprachbeschreibung sehen, welche dann spezifische Lexeme als lexikalische Füllungen selegieren. Die Beiträge dieses Bandes zeigen, dass sich die beiden Ansätze nicht ausschließen müssen, sondern sich bei der theoretischen Modellierung der regelhaften und idiosynkratischen Aspekte von Argumentstrukturen auf fruchtbare Weise ergänzen können. Neben rein theoretisch orientierten Studien enthält der Band Beiträge, deren Gegenstand die Evaluierung von Methoden zur empirischen Fundierung dieser Theorien ist. Zudem wird der Phänomenbereich aus metalexikografischer und aus der Perspektive des Fremd- bzw. Zweitspracherwerbs betrachtet. Zum Teil werden in den Beiträgen kontrastive Analysen vorgenommen, vor allem hinsichtlich des Sprachenpaares Deutsch - Spanisch. Die angewandten Aspekte des Themas werden dabei immer auch an theoretische und empirische Überlegungen rückgebunden. Die Struktur des Bandes reflektiert den Fokus, den die einzelnen Beiträge setzen: Repräsentationen, Konstruktionen, Wortfelder und Methoden.
Precise multimodal studies require precise synchronisation between audio and video signals. However, raw audio and audio from video recordings can be out of sync for several reasons. In order to re-synchronise them, a dynamic programming (DP) approach is presented here. Traditionally, DP is performed on the rectangular distance matrix comparing each value in signal A with each value in signal B. Previous work limited the search space using for example the Sakoe Chiba Band (Sakoe and Chiba, 1978). However, the overall space of the distance matrix remains identical. Here, a tunnel matrix and its according DP-algorithm are presented. The matrix contains merely the computed distance of two signals to a pre-specified bandwidth and the computational cost is equally reduced. An example implementation demonstrates the functionality on artificial data and on data from real audio and video recordings.
The effect of manipulation of a speaker’s voice as well as exposure to a native speaker’s utterance was investigated regarding the pronunciation of stops by German learners of French. Three subject groups, a Control (CG), a Manipulation (MG), and a Native Speaker (NG) Group, were recorded on two subsequent days. The MG was presented with a manipulation of their voice on the second day and the NG listened to a native French speaker, while the CG did not receive any feedback. Results show that speakers of the MG and NG were able to extract useful information from the respective feedback and successfully adapted to it. Participants were able to reduce their voice onset time values, although speakers of the NG reduced it to a greater extent.
Frimer et al. (2015) claim that there is a linear relationship between the level of prosocial language and the level of public disapproval of US Congress. A re-analysis demonstrates that this relationship is the result of a misspecified model that does not account for first-order autocorrelated disturbances. A Stata script to reproduce all presented results is available as an appendix.
The project Referenzkorpus Altdeutsch (‘Old German Reference Corpus’) aims to es- tablish a deeply-annotated text corpus of all extant Old German texts. As the automated part-of-speech and morphological pre-annotation is amended by hand, a quality control system for the results seems a desirable objective. To this end, standardized inflectional forms, generated using the morphological information, are compared with the attested word forms. Their creation is described by way of example for the Old High German part of the corpus. As is shown, in a few cases, some features of the attested word forms are also required in order to determine as exactly as possible the shape of the inflected lemma form to be created.
Mit traditionellen Methoden der Narratologie ist es nur möglich, eine begrenzte Menge von (meist kanonischen) Texten zu untersuchen. Computer hingegen können große Textmengen bewältigen und über die breitere empirische Basis einen neuen Blick auf das literarischen Schaffen eröffnen. Dazu ist es jedoch notwendig, narratologische Konzepte auch automatisch erfassbar zu machen. Die vorliegende Studie untersucht, wie ein etabliertes Phänomen des Erzählens – die Wiedergabe von Rede, Gedanken und Geschriebenem in narrativen Texten – mit Hilfe automatischer Methoden identifiziert werden kann. Auf der Basis narratologischer Forschungsliteratur wird zunächst ein Annotationsystem für Redewiedergabeformen entwickelt und auf ein Beispielkorpus von deutschsprachigen Erzähltexten angewendet. Anschließend werden Methoden zur automatischen Erkennung und deren Ergebnisse vorgestellt. Prototypen der beschriebenen Redewiedergabeerkenner sind online frei verfügbar. Die Studie liefert konkrete Ansätze für die automatische Erkennung von Redewiedergabe und demonstriert zugleich Strategien für die Nutzung von Methoden der Digital Humanities in der Narratologie.
Der Beitrag befasst sich mit der Beschwerdenexploration und Diagnosemitteilung als zentrale Elemente eines Arzt-Patient-Gesprächs. Damit verbunden sind verschiedene komplementäre Handlungsaufgaben, die von Arzt und Patient bearbeitet werden müssen. So ist es etwa Aufgabe des Arztes, beschwerdenrelevante Sachverhalte zu erfragen, die Ausführungen des Patienten mit dem eigenen medizinischen Fachwissen abzugleichen, körperliche Untersuchungen vorzunehmen und zu erläutern sowie prädiagnostische und schließlich diagnostische Mitteilungen zu formulieren. In den Aufgabenbereich des Patienten fallen indes Aktivitäten wie die Darstellung der Beschwerden vor dem Hintergrund des persönlichen Erfahrungs- und Erlebenswissens, die Relevanzmarkierung wichtiger Beschwerdenaspekte sowie die Legitimation des Arztbesuches. Eine adäquate Bearbeitung dieser Aufgaben ermöglicht einen Abgleich der verschiedenen Wissenswelten von Arzt und Patient und ebnet so den Weg für eine effektive therapeutische Zusammenarbeit.
Bilingual Kindergarten programmes. The interaction of language management and language attitudes
(2015)
Usenet is a large online resource containing user-generated messages (news articles) organised in discussion groups (newsgroups) which deal with a wide variety of different topics. We describe the download, conversion, and annotation of a comprehensive German news corpus for integration in DeReKo, the German Reference Corpus hosted at the Institut für Deutsche Sprache in Mannheim.
Formal learning in higher education creates its own challenges for didactics, teaching, technology, and organization. The growing need for well-educated employees requires new ideas and tools in education. Within the ROLE project, three personal learning environments based on ROLE technology were used to accompany “traditional” teaching and learning activities at universities. The test beds at the RWTH Aachen University in Germany, the School of Continuing Education of Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China, and the Uppsala University in Sweden differ in learning culture, the number of students and their individual background, synchronous versus distant learning, etc. The big range of test beds underlines the flexibility of ROLE technology. For each test bed, the learning scenario is presented and analyzed as well as the particular ROLE learning environment. The evaluation methods are described and the research results discussed in detail. The learned lessons provide an easy way to benefit from the ROLE research work which demonstrates the potential for new ideas based on flexible e-learning concepts and tools in “traditional” education.
Mit dem cGAT-Handbuch stellt das FOLK-Projekt eine Richtlinie für das computergestützte Transkribieren nach GAT 2 zur Verfügung. Das Handbuch wurde anhand der Transkriptionspraxis in FOLK entwickelt und enthält eine Vielzahl von authentischen Beispielen, die mit dem zugehörigen Audio auch über die Datenbank für Gesprochenes Deutsch (DGD) abgerufen werden können.
The availability of large multi-parallel corpora offers an enormous wealth of material to contrastive corpus linguists, translators and language learners, if we can exploit the data properly. Necessary preparation steps include sentence and word alignment across multiple languages. Additionally, linguistic annotation such as partof- speech tagging, lemmatisation, chunking, and dependency parsing facilitate precise querying of linguistic properties and can be used to extend word alignment to sub-sentential groups. Such highly interconnected data is stored in a relational database to allow for efficient retrieval and linguistic data mining, which may include the statistics-based selection of good example sentences. The varying information needs of contrastive linguists require a flexible linguistic query language for ad hoc searches. Such queries in the format of generalised treebank query languages will be automatically translated into SQL queries.
The book investigates the diachronic dimension of contact-induced language change based on empirical data from Pennsylvania German (PG), a variety of German in long-term contact with English. Written data published in local print media from Pennsylvania (USA) between 1868 and 1992 are analyzed with respect to semantic changes in the argument structure of verbs, the use of impersonal constructions, word order changes in subordinate clauses and in prepositional phrase constructions.
The research objective is to trace language change based on diachronic empirical data, and to assess whether existing models of language contact make provisions to cover the long-term developments found in PG. The focus of the study is thus twofold: first, it provides a detailed analysis of selected semantic and syntactic changes in Pennsylvania German, and second, it links the empirical findings to theoretical approaches to language contact.
Previous investigations of PG have drawn a more or less static, rather than dynamic, picture of this contact variety. The present study explores how the dynamics of language contact can bring about language mixing, borrowing, and, eventually, language change, taking into account psycholinguistic processes in (the head of) the bilingual speaker.
This paper investigates evidence for linguistic coherence in new urban dialects that evolved in multiethnic and multilingual urban neighbourhoods. We propose a view of coherence as an interpretation of empirical observations rather than something that would be ‘‘out there in the data’’, and argue that this interpretation should be based on evidence of systematic links between linguistic phenomena, as established by patterns of covariation between phenomena that can be shown to be related at linguistic levels. In a case study, we present results from qualitative and quantitative analyses for a set of phenomena that have been described for Kiezdeutsch, a new dialect from multilingual urban Germany. Qualitative analyses point to linguistic relationships between different phenomena and between pragmatic and linguistic levels. Quantitative analyses, based on corpus data from KiDKo (www.kiezdeutschkorpus.de), point to systematic advantages for the Kiezdeutsch data from a multiethnic and multilingual context provided by the main corpus (KiDKo/Mu), compared to complementary corpus data from a mostly monoethnic and monolingual (German) context (KiDKo/Mo). Taken together, this indicates patterns of covariation that support an interpretation of coherence for this new dialect: our findings point to an interconnected linguistic system, rather than to a mere accumulation of individual features. In addition to this internal coherence, the data also points to external coherence: Kiezdeutsch is not disconnected on the outside either, but fully integrated within the general domain of German, an integration that defies a distinction of ‘‘autochthonous’’ and ‘‘allochthonous’’ German, not only at the level of speakers, but also at the level of linguistic systems.
We examine the combination of pattern-based and distributional similarity for the induction of semantic categories. Pattern-based methods are precise and sparse while distributional methods have a higher recall. Given these particular properties we use the prediction of distributional methods as a back-off to pattern-based similarity. Since our pattern-based approach is embedded into a semi-supervised graph clustering algorithm, we also examine how distributional information is best added to that classifier. Our experiments are carried out on 5 different food categorization tasks.
This study examines the pitch profiles of French learners of German and German learners of French, both in their native language (L1), and in their respective foreign language (L2). Results of the analysis of 84 speakers suggest that for short read sentences, French and German speakers do not show pitch range differences in their native production. Furthermore, analyses of mean f0 and pitch range indicate that range is not necessarily reduced in L2 productions. These results are different from results reported in prior research. Possible reasons for these differences are discussed.
When formulating a request for an object, speakers can choose among different grammatical resources that would all serve the overall purpose. This paper examines the social contexts indexed and created by the choice of the turn format can I have x to request a shared good (the pepper grinder, a tissue from a box on the table, etc.) in British English informal interaction. The analysis is based on a video corpus of approximately 25 h of everyday interaction among family and friends. In its home environment, a request in the format can I have x treats the other as being in control over the relevant material object, a control that is the contingent outcome of ongoing courses of action. This contingent control over a shared good produces an obligation to make it available. This analysis is supported by an examination of similarly formatted request turns in other languages, of can I have x in another interactional environment (after a relevant offer has been made) in British English, and of deviant cases. The results highlight the intimate connection of request format selection to the present engagements of (prospective) request recipients.
This article reports on the on-going CoRoLa project, aiming at creating a reference corpus of contemporary Romanian (from 1945 onwards), opened for online free exploitation by researchers in linguistics and language processing, teachers of Romanian, students. We invest serious efforts in persuading large publishing houses and other owners of IPR on relevant language data to join us and contribute the project with selections of their text and speech repositories. The CoRoLa project is coordinated by two Computer Science institutes of the Romanian Academy, but enjoys cooperation of and consulting from professional linguists from other institutes of the Romanian Academy. We foresee a written component of the corpus of more than 500 million word forms, and a speech component of about 300 hours of recordings. The entire collection of texts (covering all functional styles of the language) will be pre-processed and annotated at several levels, and also documented with standardized metadata. The pre-processing includes cleaning the data and harmonising the diacritics, sentence splitting and tokenization. Annotation will include morpho-lexical tagging and lemmatization in the first stage, followed by syntactic, semantic and discourse annotation in a later stage.
This is the first comprehensive volume to compare the sociolinguistic situations of minorities in Russia and in Western Europe. As such, it provides insight into language policies, the ethnolinguistic vitality and the struggle for reversal of language shift, language revitalization and empowerment of minorities in Russia and the European Union. The volume shows that, even though largely unknown to a broader English-reading audience, the linguistic composition of Russia is by no means less diverse than multilingualism in the EU. It is therefore a valuable introduction into the historical backgrounds and current linguistic, social and legal affairs with regard to Russia’s manifold ethnic and linguistic minorities, mirrored on the discussion of recent issues in a number of well-known Western European minority situations.
Thema dieses Beitrags sind die komplexen Nominalphrasen im Deutschen, die von außen gesehen unter Umständen monströs anmuten. Ein besonderes, wohl bekanntes Problem bieten dabei sogenannte erweiterte vorangestellte Attribute. Die Komplexitäten geben u.A. zu folgenden Fragen Anlass: Inwiefern lässt sich die ‚Ausuferung‘ der deutschen Nominalphrase funktional begründen? Falls es ein Rationales hinter den Komplexitäten gibt, wie lösen dann Sprachen, die entsprechende Ausbaumöglichkeiten nicht besitzen, die einschlägigen funktionalen Aufgaben? Hier soll primär die erste Frage diskutiert werden anhand von authentischen Text(ausschnitt)en, die das Zusammenspiel zwischen vorangestellten und nachgestellten ‚Erweiterungen‘ der Nominalphrase – Relativsätze eingeschlossen – wie auch die Funktion sogenannter nichtrestriktiver Attribute im Diskurs veranschaulichen können; die zweite Frage wird in relevanten Zusammenhängen mit berücksichtigt.