Expectations of Processing Ease, Informativeness, and Accuracy Guide Toddlers’ Processing of Novel Communicative Cues

Author:

Aguirre Marie1ORCID,Brun Mélanie2,Morin Olivier34ORCID,Reboul Anne5,Mascaro Olivier2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Letters and Human Sciences, Institute of Language and Communication Sciences University of Neuchâtel

2. Université Paris Cité, CNRS, Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center

3. Institut Jean Nicod, Département d’études cognitives ENS, EHESS, CNRS, PSL University, UMR 8129

4. Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology

5. Laboratory of Cognitive Psychology, UMR 7290 CNRS and Aix‐Marseille University

Abstract

AbstractDiscovering the meaning of novel communicative cues is challenging and amounts to navigating an unbounded hypothesis space. Several theories posit that this problem can be simplified by relying on positive expectations about the cognitive utility of communicated information. These theories imply that learners should assume that novel communicative cues tend to have low processing costs and high cognitive benefits. We tested this hypothesis in three studies in which toddlers (N = 90) searched for a reward hidden in one of several containers. In all studies, an adult communicated the reward's location with an unfamiliar and ambiguous cue. We manipulated the processing costs (operationalized as inferential chain length) and cognitive benefits (operationalized as informativeness) of the possible interpretations of the cues. Toddlers processing of novel communicative cues were guided by expectations of low processing costs (Study 1) and high cognitive benefits (Studies 2 and 3). More specifically, toddlers treated novel cues as if they were easy to process, informative, and accurate, even when provided with repeated evidence to the contrary. These results indicate that, from toddlerhood onward, expectations of cognitive utility shape the processing of novel communicative cues. These data also reveal that toddlers, who are in the process of learning the language and communicative conventions of people around them, exert a pressure favoring cognitive efficiency in communicative systems.

Funder

Fondation Fyssen

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Cognitive Neuroscience,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

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