A history of stories: a large-scale cross-linguistic language acquisition study of fictional narratives

2025-06-24 16:30:002025-06-24 18:04:00Europe/ZurichA history of stories: a large-scale cross-linguistic language acquisition study of fictional narratives
2025-06-24 16:30:002025-06-24 18:04:00Europe/ZurichA history of stories: a large-scale cross-linguistic language acquisition study of fictional narratives
2025-06-24 16:30:002025-06-24 18:04:00Europe/ZurichA history of stories: a large-scale cross-linguistic language acquisition study of fictional narratives
2025-06-24 16:30:002025-06-24 18:04:00Europe/ZurichA history of stories: a large-scale cross-linguistic language acquisition study of fictional narratives

Psychiatry and Psychotherapy

Universitätsklinikum Freiburg

Universitätsklinikum Freiburg

Start

24 Jun 2025 16:30

End

24 Jun 2025 18:04

Fictional narratives shape our thinking, our emotions, and our language – even in early childhood. This study examines how children from different language areas understand, process, and verbally reproduce fictional stories. Using an interdisciplinary approach, the project combines findings from psycholinguistics, developmental psychology, and cognitive research. The goal is to capture cultural similarities and differences in language acquisition through stories and to provide new impetus for language development.

    Speaker

    PG

    Prof. Dr. Natalia Gagarina

    24 June 2025, 16:30

    24

    June

    04:30 PM

    2025

    16:30

    18:04

    A history of stories: a large-scale cross-linguistic language acquisition study of fictional narratives

    Fictional narratives shape our thinking, our emotions, and our language – even in early childhood. This study examines how children from different language areas understand, process, and verbally reproduce fictional stories. Using an interdisciplinary approach, the project combines findings from psycholinguistics, developmental psychology, and cognitive research. The goal is to capture cultural similarities and differences in language acquisition through stories and to provide new impetus for language development.

    PG

    Prof. Dr. Natalia Gagarina