Abstract

1. Preface 2. Introduction (by Wlodarczyk, Andre) 3. Part 1. Associative semantics and meta-informative centering 4. Roles and anchors of semantic situations (by Wlodarczyk, Andre) 5. Frames of semantic situations (by Wlodarczyk, Andre) 6. Grounding of the meta-informative status of utterances (by Wlodarczyk, Andre) 7. Attention-centered information in language (by Wlodarczyk, Helene) 8. Part 2. Neuropsychological evidence for the MIC theory 9. Semantic and episodic memory by reference to the ontological grounding of the old and new meta-informative status (by Stachowiak, Franz J.) 10. Tracing the role of memory and attention for the meta-informative validation of utterances (by Stachowiak, Franz J.) 11. Part 3. Meta-informative centering in languages 12. It-clefts in the meta-informative structure of the utterance in Modern and Present-day English (by Martinez-Insua, Ana E.) 13. Discourse coherence and referent identification of subject ellipsis in Japanese (by Nariyama, Shigeko) 14. Structure of centre of attention in a multi-party conversation in Japanese: Based on the data of a review meeting concerning a Science Cafe held in Hiroshima (by Saijo, Miki) 15. Verbal aspect in Slavic languages between semantics and pragmatics (by Wlodarczyk, Helene) 16. The position in the utterance and the melodic realisation of object and reflexive pronouns in classical modern literary Russian (by Azam, Olivier) 17. Accented and unaccented pronouns in Ancient Greek: A pragmatic choice by the speaker (by Pitavy, Jean-Christophe) 18. Personal subject pronouns and the meta-informative centering of utterances in classical Latin (by Vedrenne-Cloquet, Perrine) 19. Glossary of defined terminology 20. Index

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