کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
916848 | 1473394 | 2014 | 24 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
• Contrasts hypotheses about pronoun interpretation, focusing on questions about attention and intentions.
• Demonstrates that pronoun comprehension is guided by evidence about the speaker’s intentions, such as pointing.
• Uses a novel paradigm to show capture cues guide pronoun resolution only when listeners believe they occurred intentionally.
• Demonstrates that pronoun resolution is guided by evidence about the speaker’s but not listener’s attention.
A series of experiments explore the effects of attention-directing cues on pronoun resolution, contrasting four specific hypotheses about the interpretation of ambiguous pronouns he and she: (1) it is driven by grammatical rules, (2) it is primarily a function of social processing of the speaker’s intention to communicate, (3) it is modulated by the listener’s own egocentric attention, and (4) it is primarily a function of learned probabilistic cues. Experiment 1 demonstrates that pronoun interpretation is guided by the well-known N1 (first-mention) bias, which is also modulated by both the speaker’s gaze and pointing gestures. Experiment 2 demonstrates that a low-level visual capture cue has no effect on pronoun interpretation, in contrast with the social cue of pointing. Experiment 3 uses a novel intentional cue: the same attention-capture flash as in Experiment 2, but with instructions that the cue is intentionally created by the speaker. This cue does modulate the N1 bias, demonstrating the importance of information about the speaker’s intentions to pronoun resolution. Taken in sum, these findings demonstrate that pronoun resolution is a process best categorized as driven by an appreciation of the speaker’s communicative intent, which may be subserved by a sensitivity to predictive cues in the environment.
Journal: Cognitive Psychology - Volume 70, May 2014, Pages 58–81