Pragmatics as Social Inference About Intentional Action

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Pragmatic inferences are based on assumptions about how speakers communicate: speakers are taken to be cooperative and rational; they consider alternatives and make intentional choices to produce maximally informative utterances. In principle, this analysis applies to linguistic but also non-linguistic communicative actions, but this prediction is typically only tested in children and not in more systematic implicature contexts. We test key implications of this view across six online experiments with American English speaking adults (total N = 231). Experiments 1A and 1B showed that participants made pragmatic inferences based on different types of communicative actions, some being non-linguistic. In Experiment 2, pragmatic inferences were found to be conditional on the speaker’s epistemic states. Finally, Experiments 3A to 3C showed that pragmatic inferences were more likely to be made when the communicative action was produced intentionally. Taken together, these results strengthen the view that pragmatics includes social inference about cooperative communication over intentional actions, even non-linguistic actions.

Original languageEnglish
JournalOpen Mind
Volume9
Pages (from-to)290-304
Number of pages15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 08.02.2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Manuel Bohn and Michael C. Frank. Published under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license.

    Research areas

  • communication, gesture, inference, pragmatics

DOI

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