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  1. Children’s and Adults’ Sensitivity to Gricean Maxims and to the Maximize Presupposition Principle.Francesca Panzeri & Francesca Foppolo - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Up to age 5, children are known to experience difficulties in the derivation of implicitly conveyed content, sticking to literally true, even if underinformative, interpretation of sentences. The computation of implicated meanings is connected to the (apparent or manifest) violation of Gricean conversational maxims. We present a study that tests unmotivated violations of the maxims of Quantity, Relevance, and Manner and of the Maximize Presupposition principle, with a Truth Value Judgment task with three options of response. We tested pre-schoolers and (...)
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  • Language and children's understanding of knowledge: Epistemic talk in early childhood.Derek E. Montgomery - 2022 - Mind and Language 38 (4):1102-1119.
    Research on children's theory of mind often restricts conceptually meaningful talk about knowledge to instances where know references a corresponding mental state. This article offers a reappraisal of that view. From a social-pragmatic perspective, even nonreferential talk is meaningful when appropriately embedded in social routines. A synthesis of corpus data suggests children's early talk about knowledge routinely occurs in question–answer contexts. It is argued that the influence of interrogative contexts is evident in children's over-attributions of knowledge when someone is only (...)
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