Listeners use descriptive contrast to disambiguate novel ...

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Listeners use descriptive contrast to disambiguate novel referents and make inferences about novel categories Claire Bergey Dan Yurovsky

Transcript of Listeners use descriptive contrast to disambiguate novel ...

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Listeners use descriptive contrast to disambiguate novel referents and make inferences about novel categories

Claire BergeyDan Yurovsky

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How can people use contrastive inferences to learn about new words and categories?

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What are people doing when they communicate?

– people are roughly minimal and informative; description contrasts with some relevant set

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– description contrasts with some relevant set○ contrast with other present objects

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– description contrasts with some relevant set○ contrast with other present objects

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– description contrasts with some relevant set○ contrast with other present objects

Pass me the tall glass.

Mangold & Pobel, 1988; Pechmann, 1989

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– description contrasts with some relevant set○ contrast with other present objects

Pass me the tall glass.

Sedivy et al., 1999; Sedivy, 2003

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– description contrasts with some relevant set○ contrast with other present objects○ contrast with object’s category

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– description contrasts with some relevant set○ contrast with other present objects○ contrast with object’s category

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Pass me the hairy cup.

Mitchell et al., 2013; Westerbeek et al., 2015; Rubio-Fernández, 2016

Meret Oppenheim, Object

– description contrasts with some relevant set○ contrast with other present objects○ contrast with object’s category

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How can people use contrastive inferences to learn about new things?

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How can people use contrastive inferences to learn about new things?

Horowitz & Frank, 2016

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How can people use contrastive inferences to learn about new things?

“Pass me the tall dax.”

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How can people use contrastive inferences to learn about new things?

“Pass me the tall dax.”

-> Look for multiple similar things that vary in height, and choose the taller one.

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How can people use contrastive inferences to learn about new things?

“Pass me the tall dax.”

-> Look for multiple similar things that vary in height, and choose the taller one.

-> Most daxes are shorter than the one being talked about.

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How can people use contrastive inferences to learn about new things?

– resolving reference among novel objects

– inferring that a novel object is atypical of its category

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How can people use contrastive inferences to learn about new things?

– resolving reference among novel objects

– inferring that a novel object is atypical of its category

Perhaps these inferences trade off: if description contrasts among present objects, don’t infer contrast with the category.

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“Find the toma.”

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“Find the big toma.”

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“Find the big toma.”

lure target

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“Find the toma.”

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“Find the blue toma.”

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“Find the blue toma.”

lure target

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Resolving reference among novel objects

– referential disambiguation task○ utterance: adjective vs. no adjective○ context: same-shape pair vs. unique shapes○ adjective type: size vs. color

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Resolving reference among novel objects

– referential disambiguation task○ utterance: adjective vs. no adjective○ context: same-shape pair vs. unique shapes○ adjective type: size vs. color

– 300 MTurk participants, 163 retained after attention checks

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Resolving reference among novel objects

“toma” “blue toma” “toma” “big toma”

lure target

Color Size

Pro

port

ion

cho

ice

of i

tem

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Resolving reference among novel objects

“toma” “blue toma” “toma” “big toma”

lure target

Color Size

Pro

port

ion

cho

ice

of i

tem

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Resolving reference among novel objects

“toma” “blue toma” “toma” “big toma”

Color Size

Pro

port

ion

cho

ice

of i

tem

lure target

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Resolving reference among novel objects

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Resolving reference among novel objects

– participants use contrastive inference to resolve reference among unknown objects

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Resolving reference among novel objects

– participants use contrastive inference to resolve reference among unknown objects

– effect is stronger for size adjectives, directional for color adjectives

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How can people use contrastive inferences to learn about new things?

– resolving reference among novel objects

– inferring that a novel object is atypical of its category

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Hey, pass me the blue toma.

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Here you go!

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Hey, pass me the blue toma.

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0% 100%

In general, what percentage of tomas do you think are the color shown below?

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Inferring atypicality within a novel category

– 400 MTurk participants,203 retained after attention checks

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Inferring atypicality within a novel category

– 400 MTurk participants,203 retained after attention checks

– do participants infer contrast with the category from description?

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Inferring atypicality within a novel category

– 400 MTurk participants,203 retained after attention checks

– do participants infer contrast with the category from description?

– does contrast with the category trade off with contrast among present objects?

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Inferring atypicality within a novel category

– 400 MTurk participants,203 retained after attention checks

– do participants infer contrast with the category from description?

– does contrast with the category trade off with contrast among present objects?

– color vs. size?Rubio-Fernández, 2016; Degen et al., 2019

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Inferring atypicality within a novel category

color

size

Pre

vale

nce

judg

men

t

“toma” “big toma”

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Inferring atypicality within a novel category

color

size

Pre

vale

nce

judg

men

t

“toma” “big toma”

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Inferring atypicality within a novel category

color

size

Pre

vale

nce

judg

men

t

“toma” “toma” “big toma”“big toma”

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Inferring atypicality within a novel category

color

size

Pre

vale

nce

judg

men

t

“toma” “toma”“big toma” “big toma”

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Inferring atypicality within a novel category

color

size

Pre

vale

nce

judg

men

t

“toma” “toma”“big toma” “big toma”

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Inferring atypicality within a novel category

– participants infer that a described feature is atypical of the referent’s category

– robust across variation in adjective type and object context

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Inferring atypicality within a novel category

– participants infer that a described feature is atypical of the referent’s category

– robust across variation in adjective type and object context

– contrast among present objects does not ‘explain away’ contrast with category

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Both inferences at once?

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Hey, pass me the small dax.

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Hey, pass me the small dax.

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0% 100%

In general, what percentage of daxes do you think are the size shown below?

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Both inferences at once?

Per

cent

cho

ice

of t

arge

t

“dax” “small dax”

Pre

vale

nce

judg

men

t

“dax” “small dax”

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Both inferences at once?

Per

cent

cho

ice

of t

arge

t

“dax” “small dax”

Pre

vale

nce

judg

men

t

“dax” “small dax”

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Both inferences at once?

Per

cent

cho

ice

of t

arge

t

“dax” “small dax”

Pre

vale

nce

judg

men

t

“dax” “small dax”

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People make inferences about new words, objects and categories using descriptive contrast.

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People make inferences about new words, objects and categories using descriptive contrast.

– infer which unfamiliar object an unfamiliar word refers to

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People make inferences about new words, objects and categories using descriptive contrast.

– infer which unfamiliar object an unfamiliar word refers to

– infer that a described object is atypical of its category

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People make inferences about new words, objects and categories using contrastive inference.

– infer which unfamiliar object an unfamiliar word refers to

– infer that a described object is atypical of its category

– can make both inferences at once—inferences do not trade off substantially

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Claire [email protected]

Daniel [email protected]

github.com/cbergey/contrast

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Both inferences at once?

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