Title: Focus Particles and Information Structure in German
1 Corpus Data vs. Experimental Results as
Prosodic Evidence On the Case of Stressed auch
in German Denisa Lenertová Stefan
Sudhoff University of Leipzig Linguistic
Evidence University of Tübingen February 4th,
2006
2- topic prosodic marking of constituents
associated with the stressed focus particle
auch also - associated constituent (AC)
- located to the left of the particle, in the
prefield (PF) or middlefield (MF) of the
clause - represents the element added to a contextually
given set - (1) MartinAC hat AUCH Hunger.
- Martin has also hunger Martin is
hungry, too. - syntactic, semantic, and information structural
properties - Reis Rosengren (1997)
- Krifka (1999)
- Dimroth (2004)
3- Krifka (1999) - Contrastive Topic Hypothesis
- The associated constituent of stressed
postposed particles is the contrastive topic of
the clause in which they occur. (p. 113) - but ACs are not necessarily identified by the
prosodic pattern characteristic of contrastive
topics (p. 126) - Féry (1993)
- German contrastive topic constructions involve
the so-called hat pattern intonation - Frascarelli Hinterhölzl (to appear)
- contrastive topics are marked by LH accents in
German - Braun Ladd (2003), Braun (2005)
- importance of gradual phonetic parameters
instead of categorical distinctions between
accent types
4- issues
- specific prosodic realization of ACs
(categorical vs. gradual distinctions) - generalizations about the optionality of the
prosodic marking - perceptive relevance
- evidence from two different sources
- spoken language corpus
- production and perception experiments
5- 225 utterances with stressed auch, extracted from
9 movies and 12 episodes of a TV series - determination of the ACs on the basis of context
information - various functions, e.g., subjects, objects,
adverbials, predicatives - positions PF (47), MF (32), unclear cases,
e.g., ellipses - accent annotation using GToBI (Grice et al.
2005) - 52.4 high or rising accents
- 25.7 LH
- 16.7 LH
- 10.0 H
- 45.7 no accent
- 1.9 covert ACs
623.3 non-pronominal ACs 76.7 pronominal
ACs non-pronominal ACs always
accented optionality of AC-accents only found
for pronouns
7(2) Aber ein Auto hab ich auch nicht
gehört. (Buffy2) but a car have I
also not heard
8(3) Bist du auch bei Mr Chomsky in Geschichte?
(Buffy1) are you also at Mr Chomsky in
history_class
9- ACs not characterized by a specific accent
- pronominal ACs frequently unaccented
(anaphoricity/deixis) - can be dropped in sentence initial position
(topic drop) - in pro-drop languages, these elements are
standardly dropped - (4) A Und was ist mit Monica? And what about
Monica? - B Ø Wird AUCH da sein.
- will also there be She will be there,
too. (Lügen) - accented ACs bear accents of different types
LH, LH, H - no evidence for influence of semantic/information
structural properties - possible influence of phonetic and/or
paralinguistic factors
10- cases with conjoined ACs (N 15)
- (5) Wir brauchen dich, und du brauchst uns
doch auch. (Gloomy) - we need you and you need us
PRT also - cases with an accent on a non-AC (N 5)
- non-associated element bears rising accent, AC
unaccented - AC only identified contextually
- accent does not induce alternatives, but signals
paralinguistic meaning - in an appropriate context, the prosodic pattern
allows the interpretation of the accented
element as AC
11(6) Den Eindruck hab ich auch. (Paarungszeit
) this impression have I also I have this
impression, too.
12- ACs marked by high or rising accents or
unaccented - optionality limited to pronominal ACs
- no 11 correspondence between accent and
association status - various types of accents appropriate for ACs
- sometimes even accents only on non-ACs ?
identification by context - corpus study detailed examination of the
gradual phonetic parameters impossible - ? experiment with balanced materials
13- constructions with two potential ACs to the left
of auch - potential ACs comparable both between and within
utterances - (7) context 1 Can you tell me who of the PhD
students gave a talk in June? I heard that
only Martin gave one at that time. -
- a. Der Rudi hat im Juni wahrscheinlich auch
einen Vortrag gehalten. - the R. has in June probably also
a talk given - Â
- b. Im Juni hat der Rudi wahrscheinlich auch
einen Vortrag gehalten. - context 2 Can you tell me when Rudi gave talks
in this term? I only know of the one in May. - c. Der Rudi hat im Juni wahrscheinlich auch
einen Vortrag gehalten. - Â
- d. Im Juni hat der Rudi wahrscheinlich auch
einen Vortrag gehalten.
14- independent variables
- position of the intended AC (prefield vs.
middlefield) - function of the intended AC (subject vs.
temporal adverbial) - 5 lexicalizations in 4 conditions ? 20 critical
items - 20 fillers
- randomized presentation
-
- 7 female speakers
- 107 utterances entered the analysis
15- ACs marked by rising accents LH (81.3), LH
- non-ACs frequently accented, too
- PF 80.8 MF 29.1
- LH, LH,H
- ACs and non-ACs frequently characterized by the
same accent type - mean contours
- syntactic function does not influence the
prosodic realization - but different contour shapes for PF and MF
association
16prefield association
middlefield association
17- comparisons ...
- between and within utterances (paired t-tests)
- significant differences for
- f0-maximum (H)
- f0-minimum (L)
- f0-rise
- peak alignment
- duration
- within utterances
- differences between ACs and non-ACs
significantly greater for PF association than
for MF association - could be tested only between utterances
18- identification of ACs cannot be based on their
accents - instead, continuous prosodic parameters decisive
- position of the AC relevant for the magnitude of
the prosodic marking - but differences significant for both
association positions - perceptive relevance tested in the subsequent
experiments
19completion task (8) via headphones Der Rudi
hat im Juni wahrscheinlich auch einen Vortrag
gehalten. the R. has in June probably
also a talk given on the
screen ? ... und nicht nur der Martin ? ...
und nicht nur im Mai. (and not only
Martin.) (and not only in May.) perception
study 1 original utterances perception study
2 manipulated stimuli
20- 91 critical utterances from the production study
- 69 fillers
- determination of 4 parameters for each utterance,
expressing the clearness of the prosodic marking - calculation of the differences between AC and
non-AC wrt. f0- maximum, f0-rise, duration, and
peak alignment - transformation to scales ranging from 0
(smallest difference between AC and non-AC) to 1
(biggest difference) - intermediate values proportionally mapped onto
real numbers between 0 and 1 - separate scales for PF and MF association
- ? listerners judgements can be related both to
the GToBI annotation and the gradient phonetic
properties of the utterances
21- 2944 responses, 72.7 correct
- PF association 84.5 correct
- MF association 59.2 correct
- relation between judgements and accent
distribution - utterances with accented AC and deaccented non-AC
were assigned the intended interpretation more
often than utterances with accented ACs and
non-ACs - but unexpected results in the group with
accented ACs and non-ACs - PF matching results above chance level (75.9)
for the cases with identical accents on AC and
non-AC (LH or LH) - MF matching results above chance level (66.4)
for the cases with LH accents on non-AC and LH
accent on AC
22both for PF and MF association significant
correlations (various degrees) between precentage
of correct responses and the parameters for
f0-maximum, f0-rise, and duration PF
association MF association r .555
(p lt .001) r .557 (p lt .001)
23joint manipulation of f0-minimum, f0-maximum,
duration, and peak alignment on both potential
ACs in an utterance of (9) (9) Der Wiener hat um
sieben wahrscheinlich auch einen Anruf bekommen.
The Viennese probably received a call at
seven, too. 11 versions stimulus 1 clear
case of PF association stimulus 11 clear
case of MF association
24two groups of subjects group A (N
15) group B (N 29) insensitive to the
prosodic sensitive to the prosodic variation
variation group B stimulus 1 -
highest perc. PF association (87.4) stimulus
11 - highest perc. MF association (84.5)
25- production study gradual differences between ACs
and non-ACs rather than consistent differences in
accent type - perception studies interpretive preferences
depend on prosodic realization - correlation between the strength of the prosodic
marking and the percentage of decisions for a
particular association position - no preference for association with the prefield
element if prosody is used as a clue - identification of the ACs governed by the
relative magnitude of the prosodic parameters
characterizing the candidates
26- two perspectives with specific data types
- accent labels as discrete phonological
categories - gradual phonetic parameters
- marking of ACs involves continuous parameters
that are not captured by GToBI - accented ACs bear high or rising accents
- but non-ACs frequently characterized by the
same accent type - comparison of non-categorical properties
necessary - no 11 mapping, but clear interaction between
association status and prosodic realization -
importance of context information - may neutralize possible interpretive preferences
induced by prosody (corpus study) - may favour the use of prosodic marking
(experimental studies)
27 Thank you!
28Braun, Bettina (2005) Production and Perception
of Thematic Contrast in German. Bern etc.
Peter Lang Braun, Bettina D. Robert Ladd
(2003) Prosodic Correlates of Contrastive and
Non- Contrastive Themes in German. In
Proceedings of Eurospeech, September 2003,
Geneva, 789 792 Dimroth, Christine (2004)
Fokuspartikeln und Informationsgliederung im
Deutschen. Tübingen Stauffenburg Féry, Caroline
(1993) German Intonational Patterns. Tübingen
Niemeyer Frascarelli, Mara Roland Hinterhölzl
(to appear) Types of Topics in German and
Italian. In Winkler, Susanne Kerstin Schwabe
(eds.) Information Structure and the
Architecture of Grammar. A Typological
Perspective. Amsterdam, Philadelphia
Benjamins Grice, Martine, Stefan Baumann Ralf
Benzmüller (2005). German Intonation in
Autosegmental-Metrical Phonology. In Jun,
Sun-Ah (ed.) Prosodic Typology The Phonology
of Intonation and Phrasing. Oxford Oxford
University Press, 55 83 Krifka, Manfred
(1999) Additive Particles under Stress. In
Proceedings of SALT 8. Cornell CLC
Publications, 111 128 Reis, Marga Inger
Rosengren (1997) A Modular Approach to the
Grammar of Additive Particles the Case of
German Auch. In Journal of Semantics, 14, 237
309
29(10) A Ich rede mit ihr, ja? B Ich zufällig
auch. (Midsummer) I talk to her
PRT I accidentally also
30(11) Einen Sprachfehler haben sie auch
(Haie) a speech_defect have you also
31(12) ... mit Himbeergeschmack. Kirsch wär
auch ok. (Paarungszeit) ... with
raspberry_taste cherry would_be also ok
32(13) A Und was ist mit Monica? And what about
Monica? B Ø Wird auch da sein. (Lügen)
will also there be
33(14) A Where are your other clothes? B Auf
diese Frage hätt ich auch gern ne
Antwort. (Buffy10) to this question would I
also like_to_have an answer
34(15) A Willow sucht dich überall. Willow is
looking for you. B Gut, ich such sie
auch schon. (Buffy8) good I look
for_her also already
35(16) Wir brauchen dich, und du brauchst uns
doch auch. (Gloomy) we need you and
you need us PRT also
36(17) Du hast deine Freundinnen auch nach
Hause gebracht. (Lügen) you have your
girlfriends also home taken
37(18) Im Winter hat der Günther wahrscheinlich
auch Urlaub gemacht. in winter has the
Günther probably also holidays
made (SK-3-av)
38(19) Im Winter hat der Günther wahrscheinlich
auch Urlaub gemacht. in winter has the
Günther probably also holidays
made (UG-3-av)