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Kasia M. Jaszczolt University of Cambridge, U. K. people.pwfm.ac.uk/kmj21

11 th International Pragmatics Conference Melbourne, 12-17 July 2009 Default Meanings, Salient Meanings, and Automatic Enrichment. Kasia M. Jaszczolt University of Cambridge, U. K. http://people.pwf.cam.ac.uk/kmj21. Panel Salient Meanings Kasia Jaszczolt and Keith Allan Programme. Session 1

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Kasia M. Jaszczolt University of Cambridge, U. K. people.pwfm.ac.uk/kmj21

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  1. 11th International Pragmatics ConferenceMelbourne, 12-17 July 2009Default Meanings, Salient Meanings, and Automatic Enrichment Kasia M. Jaszczolt University of Cambridge, U. K. http://people.pwf.cam.ac.uk/kmj21

  2. Panel Salient MeaningsKasia Jaszczolt and Keith AllanProgramme Session 1 Kasia Jaszczolt (Cambridge) Introduction: Default meanings, salient meanings, and automatic enrichment Rachel Giora et al. (Tel Aviv) ‘Salient and nonsalient meanings in context: Interpreting metaphors and literals by adults diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome’ Eleni Kapogianni (Cambridge) ‘Graded salience effects on irony production and interpretation’

  3. Session 2 Keith Allan (Monash) ‘Graded salience: Probabilistic meanings in the lexicon’ Jiranthara Srioutai (Chulalongkorn, Bangkok) ‘Semantic representation of expressions with past-time reference: Evidence from English-Thai and Thai-English translation’ Michael Haugh (Griffith) ‘Intention(ality), action, and default implicatures’

  4. Defaults ‘…it is apparent that some implicatures are induced only in a special context (…), while others go through unless a special context is present (…).’ Horn (2004: 4-5)

  5. Propositional defaults (default interpretations of utterances) e. g. • Grice’s GCIs 1975 • Rhetorical structure rules of Segmented Discourse Representation Theory (SDRT, Asher and Lascarides, e.g. 2003) • Constraints of Optimality Theory Pragmatics (e.g. Blutner 2000; Blutner and Zeevat 2004) • Automatic, subdoxastic enrichment of Recanati’s truth-conditional pragmatics (2002, 2003, 2004) • Cognitive defaults, social, cultural and world knowledge defaults of Default Semantics (Jaszczolt 2005, 2009a, b; Srioutai 2004, 2006)

  6. Defaults: A mixed bag? • Some (→dnot all) of her lectures are inspiring. • The coffee spoon (→dspoon used for stirring coffee) is dirty. • The coffee is warm. (→d not hot) • Alex enjoyed (→d reading) the book. • You are digging your own grave. (→d causing harm to yourself) • Everybody (→d invited) is coming to the party. • The temperature fell below 0 degrees Celsius and (→d as a result) the rails contracted.

  7. Sub-propositional defaults • Levinson’s (2000) presumptive meanings (GCIs) • bread knife →d knife used for cutting bread • kitchen knife →d knife used for preparing food, e.g. chopping • steel knife →d knife made of steel • a secretary →d a female one • a road →d hard-surfaced one • I don’t like [garlic]. →d I dislike [garlic].

  8. ‘…hypotheses about meaning are entertained incrementally – as the words come in, as it were.’ Levinson (2000: 5) some →d ? a nanny →d ?

  9. Defaults in the lexicon: Nonmonotonic reasoning in processing of the lexicon • Default inheritance, defeasible logical form (Asher and Lascarides 1995, Lascarides and Copestake 1998) • Abductive inference in the lexicon (Pustejovsky 1995) • Graded Salience Hypothesis (Giora 2003) • Formulae for nonmonotonic (probabilistic) inference (Allan 2009)

  10. Graded Salience Hypothesis (Giora 2003) ‘[M]ore salient meanings – coded meanings foremost on our mind due to conventionality, frequency, familiarity, or prototypicality – are accessed faster than and reach sufficient levels of activation before less salient ones. According to the graded salience hypothesis, then, coded meanings would be accessed upon encounter, regardless of contextual information or authorial intent.’ Giora (2003: 10)

  11. Monotonic and nonmonotonic inference in the lexicon (14) Harry prefers lamb to goat. (15) Jacqueline prefers leopard to fox. Uncountable animal product-of +> meat-of +> pelt-of (adapted from Allan 2009: 9)

  12. Localism/globalism debate ? Defaults pertain to entire propositions/ sentences/events/situations of discourse ?Defaults pertain to words or phrases

  13. (14) It isn’t likely that the match will be cancelled: it’s certain. Geurts (2009: 59) (15) If the chair sometimes comes to the department meetings that is not enough; he should come always. Geurts (2009: 60), after Levinson (2000: 205)

  14. Default base • John’s book is good.’ ?+> the one he read, wrote, borrowed… Levinson (2000: 37) vs. ‘Chomsky’s book is about grammar.’

  15. Pragmatic inference and defaults should be construed as operating on a unit that is adequate for the case at hand, ranging from a morpheme to the entire discourse.

  16. ? ‘…although localism and defaultism aren’t wedded to each other, there is a natural affinity between the two.’ ? ‘…defaultism is a lost cause.’ Geurts (2009: 59)  what is ‘defaultism’?

  17. Default reasoning reflects salience, common sense, and probability.

  18. Automatic interpretations? ‘…default reasoning is reasoning that contains at least one defeasible step, and what that is can be described intuitively as follows. When you take such a step you do not think, ‘Everything is OK, so I’ll take this step’. Rather, you just take it unless you think something might not be OK.’ Bach (1984: 40).

  19. Defaults and nonmonotonic reasoning in logic and computational linguistics • From Humboldt, Jespersen and Cassirer • Reiter’s (1980) default logic : A:B C C can be concluded if A has been concluded and B can be assumed (and not B cannot be proven)

  20. Salience and defaults ? Salient meanings: contextually triggered, unlike default meanings

  21. Salience and defaults Salient meanings: contextually triggered, unlike default meanings. • ‘The criterion or threshold a meaning has to reach to be considered salient is related only to its accessibility in memory due to such factors as frequency of use or experiential familiarity.’ Giora (2003: 33)

  22. Towards a definition of defaults: ?Default interpretations are more frequent, common interpretations. (14) Kate and Leonardo acted superbly in Revolutionary Road.

  23. ?Default interpretations are interpretations that arise automatically, subdoxastically.

  24. Processing of scalar termsby children and adults: ‘These developmental findings do not favour one account over another because both could explain it. From the Default perspective, it could be claimed that scalar inferences become automatic with age and that our results are simply revealing how such inference-making matures. In contrast, Relevance Theory would suggest that children and adults use the same comprehension mechanisms but that greater cognitive resources are available for adults, which in turn encourages them to draw out more pragmatic inferences.’ Noveck (2004: 307).

  25. Default Semantics (Jaszczolt 2005, 2009a, b): Default interpretations are automatically produced interpretations. They are defaults for the context and for the speaker. Cf: ‘What is foremost on one’s mind need not necessarily be foremost on another’s.’ Giora (2003: 37)

  26. ? Defaults are predictable from directionality of communicative acts (emergentintentionality, Haugh 2008)

  27. Default Semantics (Jaszczolt 2009a,b) • Methodological globalism Until the exact length of the unit that gives rise to automatic interpretation is experimentally identified, it makes sense to adopt a methodological move that these interpretations are post-propositional. • Automatic components in the construction of primary meanings Main meaning intended by the Model Speaker and recovered by the Model Addressee is construed with the help of cognitive defaults (CD) and social, cultural and world-knowledge defaults (SCWD).

  28. Select references • Asher, N. and A. Lascarides. 1995. ‘Lexical disambiguation in a discourse context’. Journal of Semantics 12. 69-108. • Asher, N. and A. Lascarides. 2003. Logics of Conversation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. • Bach, K. 1984. ‘Default reasoning: Jumping to conclusions and knowing when to think twice. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 65. 37-58. • Benferhat, S., J. F. Bonnefon and R. da Silva Neves. 2005. ‘An overview of possibilistic handling of default reasoning, with experimental studies’. Synthese 146. 53-70. • Blutner, R. 2000. ‘Some aspects of optimality in natural language interpretation’. Journal of Semantics 17. 189-216. • Blutner, R. and H. Zeevat. 2004. ‘Editors’ introduction: Pragmatics in Optimality Theory’. In: R. Blutner and H. Zeevat (eds). Optimality Theory and Pragmatics. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. 1-24. • Chierchia, G. 2004. ‘Scalar implicatures, polarity phenomena, and the syntax/pragmatics interface’. In: A. Belletti (ed.) Structures and Beyond: The Cartography of Syntactic Structures, vol. 3. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 39-103. • Chierchia, G. 2006. ‘Broaden your views: Implicatures of domain widening and the “logicality” of language’. Linguistic Inquiry 37. 535-590. • Geurts, B. 2009. ‘Scalar implicature and local pragmatics’. Mind and Language 24. 51-79.

  29. Giora, R. 2003. On Our Mind: Salience, Context, and Figurative Language. Oxford: Oxford University Press. • Haugh, M. 2008. ‘The place of intention in the interactional achievement of implicature’. In: I. Kecskes and J. Mey (eds). Intention, Common Ground and the Egocentric Speaker-Hearer. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 45-85. • Horn, L. R. 2004. ‘Implicature’. In: L. R. Horn and G. Ward (eds). The Handbook of Pragmatics. Oxford: Blackwell. 3-28. • Jaszczolt, K. M. 2005. Default Semantics: Foundations of a Compositional Theory of Acts of Communication. Oxford: Oxford University Press. • Jaszczolt, K. M. 2006. ‘Defaults in semantics and pragmatics’. In: E. N. Zalta(ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.http://plato.stanford.edu/contents.html • Jaszczolt, K. M. 2007. ‘Variadic function and pragmatics-rich representations of belief reports’. Journal of Pragmatics 39. 934-59. • Jaszczolt, K. M. 2009a. Representing Time: An Essay on Temporality as Modality. Oxford: Oxford University Press. • Jaszczolt, K. M. 2009b. ‘Default Semantics’. In: B. Heine and H. Narrog (eds). The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Analysis . Oxford: Oxford University Press. 215-246. • Jaszczolt, K. M. 2008. ‘Psychological explanations in Gricean pragmatics and Frege’s legacy.’ In: I. Kecskes and J. Mey (eds). Intention, Common Ground and the Egocentric Speaker-Hearer. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 9-44.

  30. Lascarides, A. and A. Copestake. 1998. ‘Pragmatics and word meaning’. Journal of Linguistics 34. 387-414. • Levinson, S. C. 2000. Presumptive Meanings: The Theory of Generalized Conversational Implicature. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. • Noveck, I. A. 2004. ‘Pragmatic inferences related to logical terms’. In: I. A. Noveck and D. Sperber (eds). Experimental Pragmatics. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. 301-321. • Pustejovsky, J. 1995. The Generative Lexicon. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. • Recanati, F. 2002. ‘Does linguistic communication rest on inference?’. Mind and Language 17. 105-126. • Recanati, F. 2003. ‘Embedded implicatures’. http://jeannicod.ccsd.cnrs.fr/documents. • Recanati, F. 2004. Literal Meaning. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. • Reiter, R. 1980. ‘A logic for default reasoning’. Artificial Intelligence 13. 81-132. • Srioutai, J. 2004. ‘The Thai c1a: A marker of tense or modality?’ In: E. Daskalaki et. al. (eds). Second CamLing Proceedings. University of Cambridge. 273-80. • Srioutai, J. 2006. Time Conceptualization in Thai with Special Reference to D1ay1II, Kh3oe:y, K1aml3ang, Y3u:I and C1a. PhD Thesis. University of Cambridge. • Thomason, R. H. 1997. ‘Nonmonotonicity in linguistics’. In: J. van Benthem and A. ter Meulen (eds). Handbook of Logic and Language. Oxford: Elsevier Science. 777-831. • Veltman, F. 1996. ‘Defaults in update semantics’. Journal of Philosophical Logic 25. 221-261.

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