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Prior Beliefs Modulate Projection
Author(s) -
Judith Degen,
Judith Tonhauser
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
open mind
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2470-2986
DOI - 10.1162/opmi_a_00042
Subject(s) - projection (relational algebra) , utterance , affect (linguistics) , psychology , cognition , cognitive psychology , interpretation (philosophy) , social psychology , content (measure theory) , computer science , artificial intelligence , communication , mathematics , mathematical analysis , algorithm , neuroscience , programming language
Beliefs about the world affect language processing and interpretation in several empirical domains. In two experiments, we tested whether subjective prior beliefs about the probability of utterance content modulate projection , that is, listeners' inferences about speaker commitment to that content. We find that prior beliefs predict projection at both the group and the participant level: the higher the prior belief in a content, the more speakers are taken to be committed to it. This result motivates the integration of formal analyses of projection with cognitive theories of language understanding.

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