IN 1 HOUR!
From: Boris Cesnik
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2022 2:45 PM
To: talks@cogsci.ceu.edu
Subject: TUESDAY 27 SEPT 4PM - a talk by Ira Noveck (CNRS & Université de Paris-Cité) - “Revealing the role of intentions through experimental pragmatics", D002 QS Vienna and Zoom
Dear all,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to its talk by:
Ira Noveck (CNRS & Université de Paris-Cité)
“Revealing the role of intentions through experimental pragmatics"
Date: Tuesday, September 27, 2022 – 16:00-17:30
(CET)
Host: Christophe
Heintz
Location: D002 tiered (QS Vienna) and Zoom
PLEASE NOTE:
anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in person in Vienna must RSVP through the link below in order to get access to the lecture theatre:
Join Zoom Meeting
https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/99751279079?pwd=bFd4SHJsb3NRQVpHOXpLYVM5MXo3dz09
Meeting ID: 997 5127 9079
Passcode: 928403
ABSTRACT:
Gricean theory has (obviously) been inspirational for experimentalists who investigate pragmatic phenomena. For example, most experimental papers that describe scalar
implicature (e.g. consider how the utterance “some TRUMP voters believe that the 2020 election was fraudulent” can be understood to pragmatically mean “some but not all…”) are quick to cite Grice’s theory of communication by pointing out how
pragmatic enrichment involves detecting a maxim violation and drawing out an implied meaning. However, these same papers typically go on to decompose scalar implicature into a mechanical two-step process (e.g. find a more informative alternative to
some and negate it) that – ultimately -- hardly seems Gricean at all. That is, many of us ignore the fact, or forget, that Grice, as an ordinary language theorist, proposed an original model of communication that relies on intention-reading. The upshot
is that intention-reading has been largely overlooked in experimental pragmatic investigations. In this talk, I will present two studies that bring Gricean intention-reading back to the center of language comprehension. One of these concerns what Grice would
consider to be a conversational implicature (i.e. scalar implicatures like the one above) and another that he would consider to be a
conventional implicature (concerning the French response Si, in which one gives an affirmative response to a negative question; see Noveck et al., 2021). These studies will highlight how intention-reading can be isolated as a factor in language
comprehension.
We look forward to seeing you there!
Cognitive Science Events at CEU: https://events.ceu.edu/host/department-cognitive-science
Boris
Boris Cesnik
Department Coordinator (Vienna)
Department of Cognitive Science
5 Programs in the top 100 according to QS
Central European University Private University
Contact:
CesnikB@ceu.edu
Quellenstrasse 51 | A-1100 Wien | Austria
Office: Room B501
Tel. +43 125230 7441
http://cognitivescience.ceu.edu/
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