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Featured researches published by Jürgen Weissenborn.


Infant Behavior & Development | 2009

Language specific prosodic preferences during the first half year of life: Evidence from German and French infants

Barbara Höhle; Ranka Bijeljac-Babic; Birgit Herold; Jürgen Weissenborn; Thierry Nazzi

There is converging evidence that infants are sensitive to prosodic cues from birth onwards and use this kind of information in their earliest steps into the acquisition of words and syntactic regularities of their target language. Regarding word segmentation, it has been found that English-learning infants segment trochaic words by 7.5 months of age, and iambic words only by 10.5 months of age [Jusczyk, P. W., Houston, D. M., & Newsome, M. (1999). The beginnings of word segmentation in English-learning infants. Cognitive Psychology, 39, 159-207]. The question remains how to interpret this finding in relation to results showing that English-learning infants develop a preference for trochaic over iambic words between 6 and 9 months of age [Jusczyk, P. W., Cutler, A., & Redanz, N. (1993). Preference for the predominant stress patterns of English words. Child Development, 64, 675-687]. In the following, we report the results of four experiments using the headturn preference procedure (HPP) to explore the trochaic bias issue in German- and French-learning infants. For German, a trochaic preference was found at 6 but not at 4 months, suggesting an emergence of this preference between both ages (Experiments 1 and 2). For French, 6-month-old infants did not show a preference for either stress pattern (Experiment 3) while they were found to discriminate between the two stress patterns (Experiment 4). Our findings are the first to demonstrate that the trochaic bias is acquired by 6 months of age, is language specific and can be predicted by the rhythmic properties of the language in acquisition. We discuss the implications of this very early acquisition for our understanding of the emergence of segmentation abilities.


Developmental Science | 2003

German-learning infants' ability to detect unstressed closed class elements in continuous speech

Barbara Höhle; Jürgen Weissenborn

The paper reports on two experiments with the head turn preference method which provide evidence that already at 7 to 9 months, but not yet at 6 months, German-learning infants do recognize unstressed closed-class lexical elements in continuous speech. These findings support the view that even preverbal children are able to compute at least phonological representations for closed-class functional elements. They also suggest that these elements must be available to the language learning mechanisms of the child from very early on, allowing the child to make use of the distributional properties of closed-class lexical elements for further top-down analysis of the linguistic input, e.g. segmentation and syntactic categorization.


Brain Research | 2007

Mapping sentence form onto meaning: The syntax–semantic interface

Angela D. Friederici; Jürgen Weissenborn

The understanding of sentences involves not only the retrieval of the meaning of single words, but the identification of the relation between a verb and its arguments. The way the brain manages to process word meaning and syntactic relations during language comprehension on-line still is a matter of debate. Here we review the different views discussed in the literature and report data from crucial experiments investigating the temporal and neurotopological parameters of different information types encoded in verbs, i.e. word category information, the verbs argument structure information, the verbs selectional restriction and the morphosyntactic information encoded in the verbs inflection. The neurophysiological indices of the processes dealing with these different information types suggest an initial independence of the processing of word category information from other information types as the basis of local phrase structure building, and a later processing stage during which different information types interact. The relative ordering of the subprocesses appears to be universal, whereas the absolute timing of when during later phrases interaction takes places varies as a function of when the relevant information becomes available. Moreover, the neurophysiological indices for non-local dependency relations vary as a function of the morphological richness of the language.


Language Learning and Development | 2006

The Recognition of Discontinuous Verbal Dependencies by German 19-Month-Olds: Evidence for Lexical and Structural Influences on Children's Early Processing Capacities

Barbara Höhle; Michaela Schmitz; Lynn M. Santelmann; Jürgen Weissenborn

Recent work has shown that English-learning 18-month-olds can detect the relationship between discontinuous morphemes such as is and -ing in Grandma is always running (Gomez, 2002; Santelmann & Jusczyk, 1998) but only at a maximum of 3 intervening syllables. In this article we examine the tracking of discontinuous dependencies in children acquiring German. Due to freer word order, German allows for greater distances between dependent elements and a greater syntactic variety of the intervening elements than English does. The aim of this study was to investigate whether factors other than distance may influence the childs capacity to recognize discontinuous elements. Our findings provide evidence that childrens recognition capacities are affected not only by distance but also by their ability to linguistically analyze the material intervening between the dependent elements. We speculate that this result supports the existence of processing mechanisms that reduce a discontinuous relation to a local one based on subcategorization relations.


Archive | 1992

Routes to Verb Placement in Early German and French: The Independence of Finiteness and Agreement

Maaike Verrips; Jürgen Weissenborn

What is innate and what is learned is one of the questions underlying most current work in first language acquisition. The challenge in this field is to develop a theory that accounts for the learnability problems involved in the domain at hand, that makes correct empirical predictions, and leaves room for variation between children exactly in the domains where variation occurs.


Archive | 1990

How to Make Parameters Work: Comments on Valian

Thomas Roeper; Jürgen Weissenborn

Valian’s paper articulates an extremely important fact about language acquisition: (1) Children are given contradictory input.


Language Acquisition | 2009

Focus Particles in Children's Language: Production and Comprehension of Auch 'Also' in German Learners from 1 Year to 4 Years of Age

Barbara Höhle; Frauke Berger; Anja Müller; Michaela Schmitz; Jürgen Weissenborn

This article investigates the acquisition of the focus particle auch ‘also’ by German-learning children. We report data from spontaneous and elicited production of utterances with the focus particle auch by 1- to 4-year-olds complementing earlier findings of a delayed production of the unaccented auch compared to the accented one. But in contrast to previous studies showing that children have problems interpreting sentences with accented and unaccented auch, we found indications for adult-like comprehension in an eye-tracking experiment by children from 3 years on. These results reflect early availability of adult-like linguistic competence with respect to both auch-variants which does not always lead to adult-like performance. This variation in childrens performance across tasks is considered to be due to additional modality and task specific constraints. Development in this area thus reflects not a change in underlying knowledge, but rather a change in the constraints on its behavioral manifestation.


Archive | 2000

Where Scrambling Begins: Triggering Object Scrambling at the Early Stage in German and Bernese Swiss German

Zvi Penner; Rosemarie Tracy; Jürgen Weissenborn

At a very young age, children are capable of producing utterances, which we could hardly improve upon. The following sentences were spoken by a small German boy named Valle who was about 26 months old at the time:1


Language | 2009

Information structural constraints on children’s early language production: The acquisition of the focus particle auch (‘also’) in German-learning 12- to 36-month-olds

Anja Müller; Barbara Höhle; Michaela Schmitz; Jürgen Weissenborn

This article presents new findings for the acquisition of the focus particle auch (‘also’) in German-learning children. In a longitudinal study with 11 children between 1;00 and 3;00 years of age complemented by two experiments with children aged 2;4 and 2;8, the authors investigated children’s production of the accented and unaccented auch. The results confirm earlier findings of a temporal delay between the first occurrences of both auch-variants. Based on the empirical findings, an account for this asymmetry is proposed that relates it to a more general developmental tendency that is characterized by a growing linguistic explicitness in embedding a given utterance in its discourse context. It is suggested that the observed delay is caused by the type of relation between the particle and its related constituent: in contrast to the accented auch the unaccented auch is anaphorically related to the sentence topic. It is proposed that the initial omission reflects a general tendency in early child language to drop topic material.


Advances in Speech-Language Pathology | 2006

Word processing at 19 months and its relation to language performance at 30 months: A retrospective analysis of data from German learning children

Barbara Höhle; Ruben van de Vijver; Jürgen Weissenborn

Recent research has shown that the early lexical representations children establish in their second year of life already seem to be phonologically detailed enough to allow differentiation from very similar forms. In contrast to these findings children with specific language impairment show problems in discriminating phonologically similar word forms up to school age. In our study we investigated the question whether there would be differences in the processing of phonological details in normally developing and in children with low language performance in the second year of life. This was done by a retrospective study in which in the processing of phonological details was tested by a preferential looking experiment when the children were 19 months old. At the age of 30 months children were tested with a standardized German test of language comprehension and production (SETK2). The preferential looking data at 19 months revealed an opposite reaction pattern for the two groups: while the children scoring normally in the SETK2 increase their fixations of a pictured object only when it was named with the correct word, children with later low language performance did so only when presented with a phonologically slightly deviant mispronunciation. We suggest that this pattern does not point to a specific deficit in processing phonological information in these children but might be related to an instability of early phonological representations, and/or a generalized problem of information processing as compared to typically developing children.

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Barbara Höhle

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Zvi Penner

University of Konstanz

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Michèle Kail

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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