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Informativeness, Relevance and Scalar Implicature. Author: Roybn Carston Presenter: Ovidiu Fortu. Outline. Introduction Pragmatics Principles underlying the implicature phenomenon Types of implicatures Examples. Introduction. Pragmatics
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Informativeness, Relevance and Scalar Implicature Author: Roybn Carston Presenter: Ovidiu Fortu
Outline • Introduction • Pragmatics • Principles underlying the implicature phenomenon • Types of implicatures • Examples
Introduction • Pragmatics • Implicature = anything that is inferred from an utterance but that is not a condition for the truth of the utterance. (Gazdar, 1979) • Presupposition = anything that is presupposed to be true given an utterance
Presupposition • Possible criterion: given an utterance U, the proposition p that is inferred by listener from both U and not U is a presupposition • Example: • The king of France is bold. • The king of France is not bold. From both sentences, the affirmation and the negation, we infer that there is a king of France
Implicature • Implicatures are inferred based on the assumption that the speaker observes or flouts some principles of cooperation (different authors have identified different principles) • Grice – 4 principles (so called “maxims”) • Levinson (1981), Horn (1984) – 2 principles
Grice Principles • Quantity maxim • the communication must be adequately but not overly informative • Quality maxim • the speaker does not believe it to be false and has adequate evidence for his statement • Maxim of relation or relevance • the communication must be relevant • Maxim of manner • the communication must be clear, unambiguous, brief, and orderly
Grice Principles, reduced form • The Q-principle • Say as much as you can (given I) • The I-principle • Say no more than you must (given Q)
Types of Implicatures • Standard implicature – based on the assumption that the speaker observes the cooperation principles • A: I’ve just run out of petrol. • B: There is a garage just around the corner. B infers that he can find oil at the garage.
Types of Implicatures • Flouting implicatures – based on the assumption that the speaker deliberately flouts one of the communication principles • A: The capital of Morocco is Casablanca • B: Yes, and the capital of U.K. is Moskow A infers that his statement was wrong.
Types of Implicatures, another classification • Generalized implicatures – inferred without a special reference to context: • John walked into a house yesterday. • Infer that the house was not John’s house • Particularized implicatures – inferred only due to a special context • A: Can you tell me the time? • B: Well, the milkman is here. It must be the time when the milkman comes.
Properties of Implicatures • Strong dependency on context (see the complex implicature example) • Defeasibility (they are not entailments, and addition of new facts can cancel them)
Why is the problem of implicature hard? • Deals with the “logic defying” aspects of communication • The cooperation principles are hard to formulate (work is still done in this area, and no author claims he has a final form of the principles) • Implicatures are “hidden”, i.e. they do not appear in text, which makes a statistical approach less accessible
Scalar Implicature • Lexical (and logical) scales: • all, most, many, some • numbers • subset, set • According to the cooperation principles, the speaker must use the right member of the scale
Scalar Implicature, Examples • Bill has got some of Chomsky’s papers • Infer that Bill does not have all the Chomsky’s papers • There will be five of us for dinner tonight • Infer that there will not be more than five of us for dinner tonight • A: I like Mary. She is intelligent and good hearted. B: Yes, she is intelligent. • Infer that B thinks Mary is not good-hearted
Complex Scalar Implicatures • Scenario: Kai’s parents promise him rewards for things he does not like to do: a small reward for washing his hair, a medium reward for eating broccoli and peas, and a high reward for cleaning up his room. • Kai’s mother says: • Kai had broccoli and peas. • We infer that Kai did not clean up his room
Scalar Implicatures • Based on the Q-principle • The speaker must not make a weaker claim (i.e., he must say as much as he can, as long as this does not increase the effort) • It takes the same amount of effort to say: • John walked into his house yesterday. • John walked into a house yesterday.
Other Types of Scales • Ranked entities: • A: Is Jill a professor yet? • B: She’s a senior lecturer. Infer that Jill is not a professor. • Whole/part relation • A: Did you manage to read that chapter I gave you? • B: I read the first couple of pages. Infer that B didn’t read the whole chapter.
Other Types of Scales • Instance-of • A: Do you have any juice? • B: I have grape, orange and tomato. Infer that B does not have any apple, lemon.. • Alternate values (not necessarily ordered) • A: Did you get Paul Newman's autograph? • B: I got Joanne Woodward's. B didn’t get Newman’s autograph
Quantity principle, refined • Welker (1994) shows that the quantity principle, as formulated by Grice, is too strong: • A: I'm having a dinner party and I need four more chairs. • B: John has two chairs. Implicature: B has at most two chairs • A: I'm having a dinner party and I need four more chairs. • B: John has four chairs. This time, no implicature
Quantity principle, refined • Communication must be "... as informative as is required (for the current purposes of the exchange)" • Idea: even the scalar implicatures depend on context – not only the surrounding text, but also the situation
False Predictions • Not all scales generate implicatures all the time • The relevance principle may cancel some scalar implicatures: • A: What did you buy for your mother? • B: I bought her flowers. • Assuming that roses are on top of the flowers scale, this leads to the implicature “I didn’t buy her roses”.
False Predictions, continued • The implicature is not inferred because the statement is relevant enough • However, a possible implicature in this example is “I didn’t buy her a present”. The difference is that while it is not relevant which kind of flowers he bought, it is relevant whether he bought a present or not
Matsumoto’s constraint • Let <S, W> be a scale (with S stronger than W) • Then a scalar implicature is inferred if the following condition is met: • the choice of W instead of S must not be attributable to the observance of the maxims of quantity-2, relation or obscurity avoidance (manner-1).
Matsumoto’s constraint, contd • Equivalently, observing the quantity-2, non-obscurity and relevance takes precedence over observing quantity-1 • Idea: the relevance maxim seems to hold the key to the process of inferring implicatures
“Affirmative” Implicatures • So far, the scalar implicatures seem to simply negate the stronger claim when the weaker is presented • We can also have implicatures that do not involve negation: • If you finish your thesis by September you'll be eligible for the job. • Implicature: You'll be eligible for the job if and only if you finish your thesis by September.
Pragmatic Schemes • Let S and W be members of a scale, with S stronger than W • Q-based implicature: • S entails W • "W" implicates "not S" • R-based implicature: • S entails W • "W" implicates "S"
Pragmatic Schemes, applied • [P and Q] entails [P or Q] • "[P or Q]" Q-implicates "[not [P and Q]]" • Thus the implicature is not P or not Q, or “only one of P and Q can hold” • [P iff Q] entails [if P, Q] • "[if P, Q]" R-implicates "[P iff Q]" • “If you finish your thesis by September you will be eligible for the job” – as seen above, the implicature is that the condition is necessary
Informativeness • In both previous examples, the implicatures enrich the informational contents of the message • Observation: What is conveyed always implies logically what is said • Conclusion: the implicature mechanism allows the quantity of information in a message to grow
Richardson&Richardson critique • I broke a finger. • implicates: I broke one of my own fingers. • I found a finger. • implicates: I found someone else's finger. • Which of the schemes can be applied? • Q-implicatures or R-implicatures? • Again, relevance is the key
Cardinal numbers • Problem: A and B go to a party. They make a bet, A says that there will be 20 people at the party when they arrive. When they get to the party, there are 25 people. Who wins the bet?
Cardinal numbers, ambiguity • The source of ambiguity is the use of numbers; the sentence “there will be 20 people” can be used to express: • There will be at most 20 people there. • There will be exactly 20 people there. • There will be at least 20 people there. • The context of the bet supports the second interpretation
Cardinal numbers, continued • In Britain you have to be 18 to drive a car. • The new houses are big enough for families with three children. • A default reasoning (world knowledge is essential) decides the interpretation (“at most” – “at least”)
Conclusions • The Q principle and R(I) principle give rise to the same result: a strengthening of the meaning of the utterance • The relevance principle plays a key role, which constrains the Q and R principles • Cardinal numbers are a special case of scale; they allow punctual interpretation, but also interval interpretation
Scalar implicatures: experiments at the semantics–pragmatics interface Authors: Anna Papafragoua, Julien Musolinob Presenter: Ovidiu Fortu
Paper contents • A study of how scalar implicatures are inferred by humans • Two sets of experiments are performed with a group of young children to test their ability to infer implicatures • Only scalar implicatures are considered for the tests
First Set of Tests • Subjects:30 5-year-old children and 30 adults, all native speakers of Greek (all experiments in Greek) • Three scales : • oli, meriki (all, some) • tris, dio (three, two) • teliono, arxizo (finish,start)
Experiment setup • Subjects are presented a situation that allows a stronger claim • Subjects (both adults and children) answer questions about the situation • Questions admit yes/no answers (the subjects must assess the truth value of a claim in the given context
Results • While adults have no problem of inferring implicatures, children seem to be less sensitive to weak clauses • Only 10% - 12.5% of the weak claims in case of scale (all, some) • However, for other scales, children have better results – 65% in case (three, two), which shows that different scales are perceived differently
Justifications for Answers • Subjects were also required to provide a brief justification for their answers • Adults overwhelmingly justified their answers by stating the stronger claim • Children gave two types of justifications: • Repeating of the given statement • The stronger statement • Even in cases when they gave the right answer, the children had wrong justifications (rougly 70% of the justifications for the scale <all, some> were of the first type)
Experiment 2 • Subjects: a set of 30 children (distinct from the first set) • Children were trained to recognize pragmatic anomaly • The stories that described the situations were modified to focus on the performance of the principal character
Experiment 2, Results • Children could reject the weak statements reliably better: • 52% <all, some> (previously 12%) • 47.5% <finish, start> (previously 10%) • 90% <three, two> (previously 65%)
When children are more logical than adults: experimental investigations of scalar implicature Author: Ira A. Noveck Presenter: Ovidiu Fortu
Objectives • Study the scalar implicatures experimentally • Establish that scalar implicatures are psychologically real and common in reasoning scenarios • Establish how this class of weak scalar terms develops
Three sets of experiments • Experiment 1 – modal “might” (when it is comparable with “must”) • Experiment 2 – a follow up of experiment 1; designed to determine the extent to which the scalar implicature can be suspended • Experiment 3 – investigates weak claims based on the “some” quantifier
Experiment 1 • Subjects: 32 5-year olds, 20 7 year olds, 16 9 year olds, 20 adults (all native English speakers) • Set-up: two open boxes, one with a parrot and one with a parrot and a bear • A puppet then states 8 claims: • (1) There has to be a parrot in the box (true); • (2) There does not have to be a parrot in the box (false); • (3) There might be a parrot in the box (true); • (4) There cannot be a parrot in the box (false); • (5) There has to be a bear in the box (false); • (6) There might be a bear in the box (true); • (7) There does not have to be a bear in the box (true); • (8) There cannot be a bear in the box (false)
Experiment 1, Results • Is the statement of the puppet true? • Necessary conclusion (parrot) • Has to be a parrot Yes 75% 90% 88% 100% • Does not have to be a parrot No 72% 75% 75% 100% • Might be a parrot Yes 72% 80% 69 35 • Cannot be a parrot No 66 80% 100% 100% • Total 73% 81% 83% 83% • Possible conclusion (bear) • Has to be a bear No 47 65 88% 100% • Does not have to be a bear Yes 66 75% 81% 100% • Might be a bear Yes 53 80% 100% 100% • Cannot be a bear No 53 80% 100% 100% • Total 55 75% 92% 100%
Experiment 3 • The results and setup were very similar to the ones in previous paper • The tests with older subjects showed better results – more than 85% for 7-year olds; 10 year olds had performance comparable to adults • Children have more problems with this scale (in one test only 6% rejected all weak claims)
Conclusions • Ability to communicate using pragmatics is developed later in the growth • Implicatures are difficult to infer, requiring more experience