Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byTiffany Hawkins Modified over 9 years ago
1
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 1 Discourse and External Anchors in Developmental Thought Josef Perner Austria Financial Support:
2
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 2 In collaboration with Johannes Brandl — Philosophy Salzburg Martin Doherty — Psychology Sterling Alan Garnham — Psychology Sussex Bibiane Rendl — Psychology Salzburg Manuel Sprung — Psychology S. Mississippi Innsbruck Gabi Waidmann — Psychology Salzburg Inspirations by: Mike Martin
3
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 3 Referential Expressions Russell’s Problem Referential expressions are expressions that refer to something. What do referential terms refer to? “Napoleon B.” “The King of France” “The present King of France” ? Louis XIII Louis XIV ?
4
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 4 Referential Expressions Russell’s Theory of Description There are more or less no referential descriptions but existential claims: “The present king of France is bald” RTD: x ( y (Ky x = y) & Bx) which captures: At least one thing is K (present King of France) At most one thing is K Whatever is K is B (bald).
5
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 5 Referential Expressions Problems with Russell The existential interpretation makes it difficult to integrate information from different sentences in a text. The present King of France is bald. The present King of France uses NANO*shampoo. These are two false sentences (full stop). No sense that we are talking, within a story, about the same entity. * nicotinic acid N-Oxide
6
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 6 Escaping Russell Intentional objects as referents Discourse Referents (Karttunen, 1976) Discourse Referents as Hubs for Information Integration: Discourse Representation Theory DRT (Kamp & Reily, 1995) Discourse Referents as File Cards: File Change Semantics (Heim, 2002):
7
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 7 1 is a woman was bitten by 2 2 is a dog bit 1 jumped over 3 3 is a fence was jumped over by 2 + (a) A woman was bitten by a dog. (b) It jumped over a fence. Integrating Information within a story File Change Semantics: Heim's Example
8
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 8 Integrating information within a story Separation of “what is talked about” (DR) from “what is said about it” (info on DR): cross reference by DR#s. Reference within story: Descriptions on card Relating story to the world External anchors Reference to external objects: anchoring conditions Perspective relative talk Defining labels put a “perspective” on the external referent This mouse is big This animal is small 4 Functions of discourse referents
9
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 9 #1 := a mouse is BIG … cond: is a mouse, on this display, looks like: Discourse referents Refinements DR-identifier Defining label (name): sets perspective discourse reference Attributive information: interpreted in relation to perspective of label Discourse referent (DR) Anchoring conditions (formal anchors): determine external referent (anchor) external referent (external anchor)
10
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 10 Discourse referent = mental referent Discourse referents are mental entities required for understanding discourse hence their name But really they are “intentional objects” (thought-of objects) Also required for any kind of thinking that goes beyond perception (maybe even there). NOT intrinsically tied to language
11
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 11 Purpose of all this Explaining difficulties with alternative naming
12
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 12 Alternative Naming (Doherty & Perner 1998) : Vocabulary check Where is the “bunny?” Where is the “cup?” Where is the “rabbit?”
13
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 13 Puppet, what’s this? [Name of child], now you say the other name! It is a rabbit It is a bunny Alternative Naming: Synonyms Children have difficulties until they are about 4½ years old (see Perner et al., 2002)
14
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 14 Alternative Names: Name-Name (NN) Synonyms Bunny - Rabbit Categories Fruit - Pear
15
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 15 Control Conditions Name - Colour Cup - Red Colour - Colour Yellow - Green Name - Part Monkey - Tail Part - Part Head - Tail
16
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 16 Results: Children’s Performance ctd.
17
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 17 Results: Crosstabs and Correlations
18
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 18 Any explanations?
19
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 19 File-card Explanation
20
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 20 Heim’s rule for adults (familiarity rule of definite descriptions ): For every definite, update an old card. For every indefinite, start a new card. FILE CHANGE RULE for preschoolers: ? Perhaps: start a new card when a new descriptor is used referentially: “My friend has a rabbit,” but not attributively:“My friend is a rabbit.” open questions: File Change rules:
21
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 21 “This … open questions: Referents for Demonstratives …probably means: the man. BUT …evidently “This” doesn’t mean: the man. is a tap dance
22
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 22 External anchor Alternative Naming: NNControl: CC "This is a mouse.“ “This is green.” "This is an animal.“ “This is yellow.” #2 := an animal is small … cond: #1 := a mouse is BIG … cond : #1 := a ball is part yellow is part green cond:
23
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 23 This is “meta-cognitive” “meta-representational” information: “DR #2, and DR #1 have same external referent” External anchor Alternative Naming: NN "This is a mouse.“ "This is an animal.“ #2 cond: := an animal is small … info: same as #1 #1 cond: := a mouse is BIG … info: same as #2
24
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 24 The developmental claim Around 4 years (3 – 5 years) children attain the necessary metarepresentational ability to represent identity: info Younger than 4 tend to fail altertive naming Older than 4 tend to pass alternative naming Prediction: Same age trend for understanding identity statements
25
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 25 2 Important Points The Anchoring Info constitutes “meta-cognitive” / “meta-representational” information: “DR #2, and DR #1 have same external referent” It provides an explicit encoding of identity The Anchoring Conditions provide a sort of implicit understanding of identity as it anchors the two DRs to the same external entity.
26
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 26 Important distinctions Types of information: Defining (identifying) label Attributive information Referents Discourse referent DR External referent ER #1 := a mouse is BIG … cond: is a mouse, on this display, … DR ER
27
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 27 Understanding Identity A prediction tested
28
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 28 This is the nurse. This jewel belongs to Susi’s mother. Susi’s mother is the nurse. Prediction: Problems with identity statements 1 a nurse 2 a jewel belongs to 3 3 Susi’s mom owns 2 info: same as 1 Give back the jewel! ??
29
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 29 Identity story (Waidmann) : Results Percent correct r =.77 ** r p =.48 ** r p =.24 KABC Age False Belief Identity condition 012 0800 1500 23012
30
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 30 This is the nurse. This dog belongs to the nurse This collar belongs to the dog Control: no problems with inferences 2 a dog belongs to 1 Give back the collar! give 3 to 1 (the nurse) 3 a collar belongs to 2 1 a nurse Reasoning: If 3 belongs to 2 2 belongs to 1 then3 belongs to 1
31
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 31 Results: Bibiane Rendl 3;3 n=11 0,0 0,5 1,0 1,5 2,0 Mean correct number of test questions Age group 1 2 3 IC ID FB 3;8 n=14 4;1 n=15 4;5 n=14 Inference control Identity task False belief task
32
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 32 Instructive Pitfalls Uncovered by using file cards
33
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 33 This is the nurse. This jewel belongs to Susi’s mother. Susi’s mother is the nurse. 1 a nurse 2 a jewel belongs to 3 3 Susi’s mom owns 2 is a nurse Give back the jewel! ?? Pitfalls uncovered by file cards: Attributive “is” Attributive interpretation Susi’s mom Nurse
34
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 34 Avoiding attributive interpretations of identity statements 1 a nurse lost 2 2 a jewel belongs to 1 The nurse lost her jewel. Susi’s sister is the nurse. 3 Susi’s sister is a nurse info: same as 1 A man finds the jewel. Who should he give it to— ? Here are Susi and her sister. 4 Susi ?
35
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 35 Summary and Outlook
36
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 36 Summary: theoretical analysis Discourse Coherence intentional objects as referents (discourse referents) Discourse about reality Internal (intentional/discourse) vs. external referents Implicit identity: DRs anchored to same ER Explicit identity: representing that DRs share same ER (a case of metarepresentation). Standard means of internal referring: labels Labels enable use of Perspectival simplification (“big” vs. “big for a ”) Default assumptions (birds fly, penguins don’t)
37
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 37 Summary: development Metarepresentation develops around 4 years Children below 4 years fail metarepresentational tasks: Alternative naming Identity statements Many others: false belief, visual perspective, … File-card analysis provides Processing account of task difficulty
38
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 38 Future agenda Can we fit the following into the developmental picture? Piaget’s class inclusion task: “More boys or children?” Piaget’s seriation tasks: identity of the middle term Doherty’s Rejection Task (extension of alternative naming) How do Discourse Referents relate to Mental Models?
39
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 39 References Discourse Referents Perner, J., Rendl, B., & Garnham, A. (in press). "Objects of desire, thought, and reality: Problems of anchoring discourse referents in development." Mind & Language, Vol, pp-pp. Perner, J., & Brandl, J. (2005). File change semantics for preschoolers: alternative naming and belief understanding. Interaction Studies, 6(3), 483- 501. 501. Alternative Naming and False Belief: Perner, J., Brandl, J., & Garnham, A. (2003). What is a perspective problem? Developmental issues in understanding belief and dual identity. Facta Philosophica, 5, 355-378. Perner, J., Stummer, S., Sprung, M. & Doherty, M. J. (2002). Theory of mind finds its Piagetian Perspective: Why alternative naming comes with understanding belief. Cognitive Development, 17, 1451–1472. Perner, J. (2000). RUM, PUM, and the perspectival relativity of sortals. In J. Astington (Ed.). Minds in the making: Essays in honour of David R. Olson (212-232). Oxford: Blackwell. Doherty, M. J. & Perner, J. (1998). Metalinguistic awareness and theory of mind: just two words for the same thing? Cognitive Development, 13, 279-305. Card Sorting Kloo, D. & Perner, J. (2005). Disentangling Dimensions in the Dimensional Change Card Sorting task. Developmental Science, 8, 44-56.
40
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 40 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The END
41
Paris - July 2007Discourse – External Referents ESF- Metacognition 41 is is a is in is a Obj L MOUSE ANIMAL "A mouse" "An animal" 1 a mouse is in location L is big info: Same as 2 2 an animal is in location L is small info: Same as 1 ≈15 cm long Generalisations: Consciousness is Perspectival
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.