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Regular Articles

Maxim of quantity and presupposition in understanding object labels

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Pages 246-255 | Received 11 Sep 2018, Accepted 24 Jul 2019, Published online: 02 Aug 2019
 

ABSTRACT

Two experiments investigated whether listeners mandatorily apply the Gricean maxim of quantity. In conversation, it is infelicitous to use a label that does not distinguish the referent (“the car” when there are two cars) or to use an unnecessarily specific label (“the convertible” when only one car is present). Subjects verified labels that picked out one of two objects, which was visually cued. Labels were at the basic or subordinate level, and the objects were related (two cars) or not (car and boat). Presuppositions were manipulated by varying determiners (“the/a car”). Responses were slower and less accurate when the basic-level name was used in the context of two related objects, suggesting that listeners prefer more distinguishable names even when the referent is unambiguous. Overly specific names did not incur a cost. Manipulating determiners had little effect. These results argue against a general use of Gricean maxims or presuppositions when identifying referents.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Rebecca Bainbridge and Lotifa Ali for their help in collecting the data.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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