Dear All!
We would like to inform you that the date of György Gergely's talk has been changed.
The new date is: 17:00 (CET), Tuesday, 20 February 2024
Location: 1064 Budapest, Izabella 46, 101 room
Speaker: György Gergely (Cognitive Development Center, Department of Cognitive Science,
Central European University - Private University Vienna)
Title: The Pragmatic Stance: Infants’ Naïve Theory of Communicative Action
Abstract:
According to the standard view humans’ species-specific adaptation for linguistic
communication relies on two kinds of evolved mechanisms for information transfer:
(i) a system of code-based arbitrary symbols (words) and syntactic combinatorial devises
for encoding and decoding the literal meaning of verbal utterances, and
(ii) pragmatic Inferential and mindreading mechanisms for inferring the speaker’s intended
meaning from the verbal utterances used in the given communicative context.
Recent evolutionary-based cognitive theories of communication (such as relevance theory,
Sperber & Wilson, 1986, 2002, and natural pedagogy theory, Gergely & Csibra, 2006,
Csibra & Gergely, 2011) proposed that humans’ communicative competence is an early and
independent cognitive adaptation selected for recognizing ostensive communicative actions
and interpreting the communicative and informative intentions they manifest. On this view,
even before and independently of acquiring linguistic skillsthe ‘pragmatic stance’ enables
an ostensively addressed human agent to recover from purely non-verbal ostensive
communicative action manifestations the relevant information that the communicating
partner intends to convey in the given communicative context.
In my talk I’ll focus on our recent studies exploring the hypothesis that young preverbal
infants’ can recognize contingent turn-taking exchange of unfamiliar signal sequences as
an informative cue indicating ostensive communicative transfer of new and relevant
information between cooperating epistemic agents.
First, I’ll summarize evidence from natural pedagogy theory demonstrating preverbal
infants’ evolved sensitivity to certain behavioral signals (such as eye-contact, or
motherese) that are interpreted as ostensive communicative acts and induce assumptions of
referential intention, presumption of relevance, and special interpretive biases in the
infants about the intended informative contents conveyed by non-verbal ostensive
manifestations. Similarly, 8- and 10-month-olds recognize an unfamiliar entity’s
contingent reactivity at a distance as an ostensive cue indicating a communicative agent
acting with communicative and referential intentions. When the contingently reactive agent
performed a subsequent object-directed orientating action infants reacted with a
referential gaze following response to identify the intended referent indicated. Following
up on these findings our new studies were designed to test the further hypothesis that
young infants may also possess evolved sensitivity to abstract structural constraints on
the serial organization of signals that the turn-taking exchange of signal sequences must
satisfy to sanction infants’ interpretation that they serve (and indicate) communicative
transmission of new and relevant information between the ostensively communicating
epistemic agents.
We presented infants with two unfamiliar entities engaged in a repeated turn-taking
exchange of unfamiliar (non-speech) sound sequences (triplets of melodic sounds or morse
beeps) in three conditions to compare infants’ reactions to three types of serial
dependency structure that characterized the exchanged signal sequences. The ‘communicative
information transfer’ condition was designed to present infants with repeated turn-taking
exchanges of sequences of (non-speech) vocal signals characterized by an algebraic
non-local serial dependency structure (satisfying the structural constraint on linguistic
signal sequences of natural languages that support syntactic rules of a context-free
phrase-structure grammar).
The turn-taking exchange of these partially co-dependent and partially variable signal
sequences was contrasted with two control conditions characterized either by exchanging
(i) perfectly contingent repetitions of identical signal sequences or by exchanging (ii)
fully unrelated random series of vocal signals (neither of which could support
communicative transmission of novel information). Our third control study compared the
‘communicative information transfer’ condition with a single agent condition in which the
structural constraints characterizing the partially co-dependent and partially variable
signal sequences was left intact while the condition of turn-taking exchange between two
distally interacting agents was violated as only a single agent produced the very same
series of vocal signals.
These studies employed a violation-of-expectation looking time paradigm with 10- and
13-month-old infants to test our predictions about infants’ context-based pragmatic
inferences and communicative mindreading abilities. In sum, the results provide converging
evidence showing that the (as yet largely preverbal) infants could recognize the abstract
structural cue of partial variability of signal sequences exchanged by two turn-taking
agents. They selectively restricted their attribution of ostensive communication and
communicative transfer of relevant information to the condition that satisfied both of the
two essential criteria for diagnosing conversational information exchange:
(i) Partial co-dependence and partial variability of the signal sequences that are
exchanged by
(ii) Two distally interacting turn-taking agents in a temporally contingent manner
I’ll end by briefly discussing the multiple implications of these findings for
a) preverbal infants pragmatic inferential and communicative mindreading abilities, and
(b) preverbal infants’ preparedness to identify and extract the abstract serial structural
properties of signal sequences that satisfy the structural constraints that characterize
the syntactic properties of natural languages, which is likely to play an essential role
both in the acquisition of word meanings and the syntactic structure of natural languages.
If you have questions about the event, please contact us via email
(kelemen.alexandra@ppk.elte.hu<mailto:kelemen.alexandra@ppk.elte.hu> or
reka.schvajda@ppk.elte.hu<mailto:reka.schvajda@ppk.elte.hu>).
We look forward to seeing you at the event,
Alexandra Kelemen
Réka Schvajda
organizers
ELTE Department of Cognitive Psychology
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