Abstract
When referring to objects, speakers are often more specific than necessary for the purpose of establishing unique reference, e.g., by producing redundant modifiers. A computational model of referring expression production that accounts for many of the key patterns in redundant adjectival modification assumes that adjectives differ in how noisy (reliable), and consequently, how useful they are for reference. Here we investigate one hypothesis about the source of the assumed adjectival noise: that it reflects the perceptual difficulty of establishing whether the property denoted by the adjective holds of the contextually relevant objects. In Exp.1, we collect perceptual difficulty norms for items that vary in color and material. In Exp. 2, we test the highest (material) and lowest (color) perceptual difficulty items in a reference game and find that material is indeed less likely to be mentioned redundantly, replicating previous work. In Exp. 3, we obtain norms for the tested items in a second perceptual difficulty measure with the aim of testing the effect of perceptual difficulty within property type. The overall results provide preliminary support for the hypothesis that the propensity to redundantly use color over material adjectives may be driven by the relative ease of assessing an object’s color, compared to the relative difficulty of assessing its material.
Highlights
Speakers often include redundant modifiers in referring expressions (Pechmann 1989; Gatt et al 2011; Arts et al 2011; Koolen et al 2013)
Material adjectives resulted in higher error rates (β= 0.48, SE=0.12, p
Our analysis of the responses to filler trials showed that the preference to mention color transferred to trials in which neither color nor material mention was required for unique reference
Summary
Speakers often include redundant modifiers in referring expressions (Pechmann 1989; Gatt et al 2011; Arts et al 2011; Koolen et al 2013). Degen et al (2020) show that assuming size adjectives are noisier than color adjectives accounts for asymmetries in the redundant production of color vs size adjectives, and effects of scene complexity on redundant modification fall out of the model for free This account raises the crucial question regarding the source of the presumed adjectival noise. The prediction is that systematic differences in the redundant modification patterns observed for color and material adjectives can be explained by a difference in perceptual difficulty of establishing whether objects are of a particular color or material The more difficult it is to judge whether an object has a property, the less likely speakers should be to redundantly mention that property. In Exp. 3, we replicate the perceptual difficulty measures from Exp. 1 and investigate the role of perceptual difficulty within property type
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