Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5039887 Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 2017 19 Pages PDF
Abstract

•First evidence for the timing of desire reasoning in preschool children.•5-year-olds use desire reasoning to constrain online referential interpretation.•Evidence for rapid integration of positive and negative desire inferences.•Only inferences about desired outcomes were used to constrain explicit responses.

Two experiments examined whether 5-year-olds draw inferences about desire outcomes that constrain their online interpretation of an utterance. Children were informed of a speaker's positive (Experiment 1) or negative (Experiment 2) desire to receive a specific toy as a gift before hearing a referentially ambiguous statement (“That's my present”) spoken with either a happy or sad voice. After hearing the speaker express a positive desire, children (N = 24) showed an implicit (i.e., eye gaze) and explicit ability to predict reference to the desired object when the speaker sounded happy, but they showed only implicit consideration of the alternate object when the speaker sounded sad. After hearing the speaker express a negative desire, children (N = 24) used only happy prosodic cues to predict the intended referent of the statement. Taken together, the findings indicate that the efficiency with which 5-year-olds integrate desire reasoning with language processing depends on the emotional valence of the speaker's voice but not on the type of desire representations (i.e., positive vs. negative) that children must reason about online.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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