
Usage-based Perspectives on Language and Language Acquisition
In honour of Heike Behrens
Editor
e-Book – Open Access
ISBN 9789027244130
Over the last three decades, usage-based (UB) approaches have developed into a leading paradigm in research on language, language use, and (first and second) language acquisition. This volume shows how current UB approaches—embracing diverse perspectives, disciplines, and methodologies—place authentic language use in interaction at center stage. The contributions explore a broad range of related questions: How can linguistic representations be described? How does constructional knowledge, including vocabulary, evolve in different languages and contexts? How do children develop discourse-level processing skills? Which input affordances, including scaffolding and frequency distributions, shape language acquisition? How can we explain individual learning trajectories, including for children with developmental language disorders? The chapters are framed by a preface outlining the origins of UB approaches and a postface addressing current and future directions and challenges. This is a volume in honour of Heike Behrens and her crucial contributions to theoretical and empirical UB research. It will be an interesting read for students, researchers, and practitioners interested in language, language use, language development, and multilingualism.
[Trends in Language Acquisition Research, 35] Expected May 2026. xx, 347 pp. + index
Publishing status: In production
© John Benjamins
To be made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.
For any use beyond this license, please contact the publisher at rights@benjamins.nl.
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements | pp. ix–x
- Author biographies | pp. xi–xvi
- Preface: The evolution of usage-based approaches to language developmentElena V. M. Lieven | pp. xvii–xx
- IntroductionKarin Madlener-Charpentier, Marjolijn Verspoor and Mirjam Weder | pp. 1–19
- Part I. First language use and development
- Chapter 1. The wealth of the stimulusDan I. Slobin | pp. 22–39
- Chapter 2. Scaffolding: A contribution to the Interaction Acquisition Support System (IASS)Marie Klatt and Stefan Pfänder | pp. 40–68
- Chapter 3. What’s in a word? Cognitive-linguistic, corpus-linguistic, neuroscientific, AI, psycholinguistic, and usage-based perspectivesNick Ellis | pp. 69–110
- Chapter 4. Explaining individual differences in children’s vocabulary growth: Insights from the Language 0–5 ProjectCaroline F. Rowland, Gary Jones, Michelle S. Peter, Amy Bidgood, Andrew Jessop, Samantha Durrant, Paula Stinson and Julian M. Pine | pp. 111–140
- Chapter 5. Construction families and grammatical paradigms — or why the constructicon needs horizontal relationsHolger Diessel | pp. 141–167
- Chapter 6. The ditransitive verb-argument construction in German L1 acquisition: A longitudinal case studyRasmus Steinkrauss | pp. 168–199
- Chapter 7. The pragmatic development of multi-sentential discourseDanielle Matthews | pp. 200–222
- Part II. Second language use and acquisition
- Chapter 8. Second language learning as local and long-term process in and for social interactionSøren Wind Eskildsen | pp. 224–247
- Chapter 9. Verb-argument constructions in advanced L2 English: The case of sojournersZeynep Köylü | pp. 248–271
- Chapter 10. A longitudinal dynamic usage-based study on peer interaction at an Indonesian pesantrenFeisal Aziez, Szilvia Bátyi, Simone E. Pfenninger and Marjolijn Verspoor | pp. 272–303
- Chapter 11. Usage and context in pediatric speech and language therapy: Helping children with oral developmental language disorder build their language system(s)Katrin Skoruppa | pp. 304–330
- Postface. Usage-based language acquisition research: Where to next?Ute Römer-Barron | pp. 331–339
- Index | pp. 341–343