The Pervasive Role of Pragmatics in Early Language

Manuel Bohn,Michael C. Frank

Published 2019 in Annual Review of Developmental Psychology

ABSTRACT

Language is a fundamentally social endeavor. Pragmatics is the study of how speakers and listeners use social reasoning to go beyond the literal meanings of words to interpret language in context. In this article, we take a pragmatic perspective on language development and argue for developmental continuity between early nonverbal communication, language learning, and linguistic pragmatics. We link phenomena from these different literatures by relating them to a computational framework (the rational speech act framework), which conceptualizes communication as fundamentally inferential and grounded in social cognition. The model specifies how different information sources (linguistic utterances, social cues, common ground) are combined when making pragmatic inferences. We present evidence in favor of this inferential view and review how pragmatic reasoning supports children's learning, comprehension, and use of language.

PUBLICATION RECORD

  • Publication year

    2019

  • Venue

    Annual Review of Developmental Psychology

  • Publication date

    2019-06-17

  • Fields of study

    Linguistics, Psychology

  • Identifiers
  • External record

    Open on Semantic Scholar

  • Source metadata

    Semantic Scholar

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