Grammatical Perspective-Taking in Comprehension and Production

Author:

Anderson Carolyn Jane1ORCID,Dillon Brian2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Computer Science, Wellesley College, Wellesley, USA

2. Department of Linguistics, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, USA

Abstract

AbstractLanguage use in conversation requires conversation partners to consider each other’s points-of-view, or perspectives. A large body of work has explored how conversation partners take into account differences in knowledge states when choosing referring expressions. This paper explores how well findings from perspective-taking in reference generalize to a relatively understudied domain of perspective: the processing of grammatical perspectival expressions like the motion verbs come and go in English. We re-visit findings from perspective-taking in reference that conversation participants are subject to egocentric biases: they are biased towards their own perspectives. Drawing on theoretical proposals for grammatical perspective-taking and prior experimental studies of perspective-taking in reference, we compare two models of grammatical perspective-taking: a serial anchoring-and-adjustment model, and a simultaneous integration model. We test their differing predictions in a series of comprehension and production experiments using the perspectival motion verbs come and go as a case study. While our comprehension studies suggest that listeners reason simultaneously over multiple perspectives, as in the simultaneous integration model, our production findings are more mixed: we find support for only one of the simultaneous integration model’s two key predictions. More generally, our findings suggest a role for egocentric bias in production for grammatical perspective-taking as well as when choosing referring expressions.

Publisher

MIT Press

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

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4. Guess who’s coming (and who’s going): Bringing perspective to the rational speech acts framework;Anderson,2019

5. Barlew, J. (2017). The semantics and pragmatics of perspectival expressions in English and Bulu: The case of deictic motion verbs[Unpublished doctoral dissertation]. The Ohio State University.

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