György Gergely
Institute for Psychological Research
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
*Learning 'about' versus learning 'from other minds: *
*The role of ostensive cues in triggering pedagogical knowledge transfer *
*in human infants***
Tuesday, 28 November, 2006, 5 PM
CEU Department of Philosophy, 1051 Budapest, Zrínyi u. 14, 4th floor,
rm. 412.**
*Abstract*
By the end of their first year human infants start to exhibit a number
of species-unique social cognitive competences (such as social
referencing, imitative learning of novel means, or proto-declarative
pointing) that involve triadic interactions in ostensive communicative
cuing contexts. The currently dominant interpretation of these early
social-cognitive phenomena assumes that their primary function is to
serve /social motives/ (such as intersubjective sharing of mental
states). In this talk I shall contrast this view with an alternative
interpretation based on the theory of human 'pedagogy' (Csibra &
Gergely, 2006; Gergely & Csibra, 2005, 2006) which assumes that
ostensively cued triadic interactions serve primarily the /epistemic
/function of transferring new and relevant cultural knowledge about
referents to infants. The theory argues that others' referential
manifestations during triadic interactions are typically framed by
specific types of /ostensive-communicative cues/ for which infants show
early sensitivity and preference. These include eye-contact, contingent
turn-taking reactivity, the prosodic intonation pattern of motherese,/
/and/ /addressing infants by their own name/./ Such ostensive cues
trigger in infants the interpretation that the other exhibits a
communicative intention addressed to them to manifest new and relevant
information for them to fast learn about the referent. It is
hypothesized that ostensive cues can act as an 'interpretation switch'
directing infants to construe others' referential knowledge
manifestations as pedagogical 'teaching' events. I shall review recent
evidence from studies of relevance-guided selective imitative learning
and of infants' differential interpretation of others' referential
emotion expressions during the second year that provide convergent
empirical support for the hypothesized interpretation-modulating role of
ostensive cuing in early infancy.