Gisbert Fanselow is Professor of Syntax at the University of Potsdam since 1993. He started his linguistic career with a monograph on the semantic interpretation of nominal compounds (Zur Syntax und Semantik der Nominalkomposition, 1981). Later, he specialized in syntax, focusing there on topics such as configurationality (Konfigurationalität, 1987), scrambling, discontinuous NPs, question formation, and syntactic theory (Minimale Syntax, 1991). At the University of Potsdam, this focus on syntax was complemented by research on psycholinguistic issues.
Caroline Féry is Professor of Phonology at the University of Potsdam. Her area of specialization is phonology, phonetics and the phonology-syntax interface. She has published a number of papers on themes touching intonation, prosody, metrical structure and the theory of grammar. She is also involved in a large-scale project studying information structure in a typological perspective. Her books include German Tonal Pattern (1993), 'Phonologie des Deutschen: Eine optimalitätstheoretische Einführung' (2001), and The Syllable in Optimality Theory (with Ruben van de Vijver, 2003).
Ralf Vogel obtained his PhD in German Linguistics at the Humboldt University Berlin in 1998. He works as research assistant at the Linguistics department of the University of Potsdam. His area of specialization is syntax, with a focus on Germanic syntax, the interaction between syntax, phonology and semantics, empirical syntax research, including experimental, corpus and dialect studies. He is an expert in Optimality Theory and has published a number of papers in all these fields. His published work includes Minimality Effects in Syntax (with Arthur Stepanov amnd Gisbert Fanselow, 2004)
Matthias Schlesewsky obtained a 'Diplom' in Chemistry (MSc equivalent) from the University of Potsdam in 1992. He subsequently moved to the field of theoretical linguistics, in which in 1997 he obtained his PhD from the University of Potsdam for a dissertation on the processing of morphological case in German. From 1997 to 2002. He was a research assistant in the Linguistics department of the University of Potsdam, before becoming an Assistant Professor of Neurolinguistics at the Philipps University Marburg. Articles in a wide range of international journals reflect his research interests on the real-time comprehension of morphological case and arguments and its neurophysiological and neuroanatomical correlates.