Infants Produce Optimally Informative Points to Satisfy the Epistemic Needs of Their Communicative Partner.

Q1 Social Sciences Open Mind Pub Date : 2024-10-04 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1162/opmi_a_00166
Tibor Tauzin, Josep Call, György Gergely
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Abstract

Pragmatic theories assume that during communicative exchanges humans strive to be optimally informative and spontaneously adjust their communicative signals to satisfy their addressee's inferred epistemic needs. For instance, when necessary, adults flexibly and appropriately modify their communicative gestures to provide their partner the relevant information she lacks about the situation. To investigate this ability in infants, we designed a cooperative task in which 18-month-olds were asked to point at the target object they wanted to receive. In Experiment 1, we found that when their desired object was placed behind a distractor object, infants appropriately modified their prototypical pointing to avoid mistakenly indicating the distractor to their partner. When the objects were covered, and their cooperative partner had no information (Experiment 2) or incorrect information (Experiment 3) about the target's location - as opposed to being knowledgeable about it - infants pointed differentially more often at the target and employed modified pointing gestures more frequently as a function of the amount of relevant information that their partner needed to retrieve their desired object from its correct location. These findings demonstrate that when responding to a verbal request in a cooperative task 18-month-old infants can take into account their communicative partner's epistemic states and when necessary provide her with the relevant information she lacks through sufficiently informative deictic gestures. Our results indicate that infants possess an early emerging, species-unique cognitive adaptation specialized for communicative mindreading and pragmatic inferential communication which enable the efficient exchange of relevant information between communicating social partners in cooperative contexts.

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婴儿产生最佳信息点,以满足其交流伙伴的认识需求。
实用主义理论认为,在交际过程中,人类会努力提供最佳信息,并自发地调整自己的交际信号,以满足对方推断出的认识需求。例如,在必要时,成人会灵活而恰当地修改自己的交际手势,以向对方提供她所缺乏的有关情况的相关信息。为了研究婴儿的这种能力,我们设计了一个合作任务,要求 18 个月大的婴儿指向他们想要得到的目标物。在实验 1 中,我们发现当他们想要的目标物被放在一个分散注意力的物体后面时,婴儿会适当地改变他们的原型指向,以避免错误地将分散注意力的物体指向他们的同伴。当目标物被遮住,而他们的合作同伴对目标物的位置没有信息(实验 2)或信息不正确(实验 3)--而不是知道目标物的位置--时,婴儿指向目标物的频率会有所不同,而且他们会更频繁地使用修改过的指向手势,这与他们的同伴需要多少相关信息才能从正确位置取回他们想要的目标物有关。这些研究结果表明,18 个月大的婴儿在合作任务中回应语言请求时,能考虑到其交流伙伴的认识状态,并在必要时通过信息充分的指认手势向其提供她所缺乏的相关信息。我们的研究结果表明,婴儿拥有一种早期出现的、物种特有的认知适应能力,专门用于交流读心和语用推理交流,这使得在合作情境中交流的社会伙伴之间能够有效地交换相关信息。
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来源期刊
Open Mind
Open Mind Social Sciences-Linguistics and Language
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
53 weeks
期刊最新文献
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