社会身份,精确和慈善:当不精确的说话者受到更严格的标准时

Andrea Beltrama, F. Schwarz
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引用次数: 1

摘要

最近已经开始显示出社会信息和语用推理之间的系统联系。这些发现提出了一个问题,即社会信息是否会根据一个已知和确定的事实影响理解者对语言描述正确性的评估。我们通过基于数字词的解释测试说话人身份对T(真理)-V(价值)J(判断)s的影响来探讨这个问题。我们发现,与社会期望说话更精确的人(如“书呆子”)相比,社会期望说话更精确的人(如“冷淡”)说出的不精确的陈述被拒绝的比率更高,因此需要更严格的评估标准。我们对这一新发现的解释是,书呆子说话的人通常被认为更精确,因此在认知上比寒气的人更可信。新出现的情况是,TVJ评估受到社会因素的影响的方式与其他实验任务不同,这表明社会信息与不同的解释任务和过程之间存在微妙的相互作用
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social identity, precision and charity: when less precise speakers are held to stricter standard
Recent has begun to show systematic connections between social information and pragmatic reasoning. These findings raise the question of whether social information shapes comprehenders' assessments of the correctness of linguistic description in light of a single known and determined fact. We explore this question by testing the impact of speaker identity on T(ruth)-V(alue) J(udgment)s based on the interpretation of number words. We find that imprecise statements from speakers socially expected to be less precise – i.e. “Chill" ones – are rejected at a higher rate, and thus held to more stringent evaluation standards, than those from speakers socially expected to speak more precisely – i.e. “Nerdy" ones. We explain the new finding by appealing to the idea that, by virtue of generally being perceived to be more precise, Nerdy speakers are granted higher epistemic credibility than Chill ones. The emerging picture is one in which TVJ assessments are affected by social considerations in a different way from other experimental tasks, suggesting a nuanced interplay between social information and different interpretation tasks and processes
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