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Common Ground

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'Put the bottom block below the apple.' When bottom-most block in listener's display is visible only to listener ... they know is bottom-most in the speaker's ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Common Ground


1
Common Ground
  • Linguistic referents are established w/in a
    domain of interpretation, which includes
    context
  • One component of context Common Ground
  • Mutual knowledge, beliefs, assumptions among
    participants in conversation
  • Comes from community co-membership, physical
    co-presence, linguistic co-presence,

2
Conversation Common Ground
  • Clark (1996)
  • Language Joint action by people cooperating to
    achieve particular goals
  • Optimal communication requires keeping track of
    whats in Common Ground and using that in both
    producing and understanding language
  • As usual, whats at issue is timing
  • How quickly do/can language users make use of
    knowledge about Common Ground when speaking
    listening?

3
Keysar Colleagues (1996, 2000)
  • In several studies, find that listeners
    immediate interpretations are egocentric
  • i.e., Dont take into account which knowledge
    they share with speaker vs which knowledge only
    they have
  • Monitor eye movements to visual display
    containing referents for items mentioned in
    speech
  • Speaker (confederate) gives listener spoken
    instructions to move objects in display
  • Some objects visible to both (Common Ground)
  • Some objects visible only to listener (Privileged
    Ground)
  • Listeners just as likely to look at Privileged
    objects as at Common objects, if they match
    instructions best

4
Problem with Keysars Studies
  • Very best physical match for instruction object
    in Privileged Ground
  • Put the bottom block below the apple.
  • When bottom-most block in listeners display is
    visible only to listener
  • Listeners just as likely to look at the
    bottom-most block in their display as to look at
    the block that they know is bottom-most in the
    speakers display
  • Better to make the object in Common Ground just
    as good a match for the instructions as the
    object in Privileged Ground is

5
Another Potential Problem
  • Common Ground is typically accumulated and
    adjusted incrementally over the course of
    conversation
  • In Keysars studies, listeners simply instructed
    about what was visible to whom
  • Better to use an explicit grounding process with
    common ground established on the basis of
    linguistic co-presence

6
Hanna et al. (2003) Experiment 1
  • Participants
  • 12 Listeners (L) Confederate Speaker (S) pairs
  • Listener told that Speaker was lab assistant but
    naïve about purpose of study (false)
  • Apparatus Head-mounted eyetracker
  • Eye camera tracks pupil using infrared light
  • Scene camera shows line of sight, so head can
    move still know where eyes are looking
  • Spatial resolution 1 degree
  • Temporal resolution 33.33 msec
  • Sampling rate 30 frames/sec

7
Experiment 1 Procedure
  • Materials (more on next slide)
  • Boxes containing 3 x 3 grid of locations
  • For each trial, 7 objects each for S L
  • 5 are to be placed in the grid by L according to
    Ss instructions
  • S and L dont see each others grids or objects
  • Instructions
  • On each trial, get envelope with 7 objects
    printed instructions
  • Ss instructions show layout of objects for trial
    script of instructions to give Listener
  • Ls instructions include which of the objects is
    secret
  • ( Privileged Ground) where to put it in
    grid
  • L knows S doesnt know what shape is secret or
    where it is (true)

8
Visual Display Stimuli
  • Target Red triangle
  • Competitor Other triangle
  • - Same or diff color from Target
  • S Secret Shape, seen by Listener only
  • Competitor or some other shape
  • When Competitor Secret, its in Privileged
    Ground
  • - Will they look at it as much as they do to a
    Competitor thats in Common Ground???

Critical ( last) instruction from Speaker
9
  • Same color competitor in Common Ground
  • - L has to ask for clarification in this cond
  • Same color competitor in Privileged Ground
  • Fewer looks to Competitor in Privileged Ground by
    400 msec after onset of Adj
  • - Very similar to diff color conds

10
Hanna et al. (2002) Expt 2
  • Possible criticism of Expt 1 ( other expts w/
    similar design)
  • By design, Confederate Speaker doesnt know about
    Privileged Ground objects so never mentions
    them
  • Maybe Listeners move their eyes to objects that
    are more likely to be mentioned by Speaker
  • Rather than taking Speakers perspective into
    account while interpreting referring expressions?
  • Solution Give Speaker Listener different
    information about the state of some objects

11
Stimulus Displays Descriptions
  • Listener given 2 pairs of objects of same type
  • 2 jars, 2 martini glasses,
  • Objects described aloud by Exptr, left to right
  • Sometimes objects described inaccurately
  • 2 empty jars, when there is only 1 empty jar
    2 empty martini glasses
  • Listener told will be mistakes sometimes but not
    to talk with Speaker to correct them
  • Told theres another condition in Expt where
    Listeners get to make corrections

12
Instructions Displays
  • Display properties disambiguate instruction Early
    or Late
  • Pick up the empty martini glass
  • Late 1 empty version of both types
    of objects
  • Early 1 empty version of 1 type of object 2
    empty versions of other type of object
  • Disambiguates early because definite the empty
    can have a unique ref only if only 1 of objects
    of a type is empty

13
Definite vs Indefinite Displays Instructions
Pick up the empty martini glass.
vs Pick up one of the empty martini glasses.
Late
Late
Mismatch Speaker told this But Listener
sees this
Early
Early
14
Design Logic
  • Listeners told to remember how objects were
    described to Speaker to do what they think the
    Speaker intends them to do
  • In Mismatch conditions, which type of object is
    the referent is disambiguated Early
  • But its a different object type for Speaker
    Listener
  • Instruction Pick up the empty martini glass
  • Speaker believes Only 1 empty martini glass 2
    empty jars
  • Listener sees 2 empty martini glasses only 1
    empty jar
  • Questions
  • Will Listener look at glass she knows Speaker
    thinks empty?
  • If yes, how soon, compared to Early Late Match
    conditions?

15
Results
Late
Early
Mismatch
16
Conclusions
  • Listeners look at target faster when instructions
    pick out a unique referent earlier
  • the empty when only 1 pair of objects has only
    1 empty version
  • Listeners can quickly take Speakers perspective
    into account
  • Look at target faster in Mismatch than in Late
    conditions
  • From Speakers perspective, instruction picks out
    a unique referent early
  • From Listeners perspective, picks out other
    object type
  • But not as fast as in Early conditions
  • So theres some effort in taking Speakers
    perspective
  • No evidence here for an initial egocentric stage
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