What’s Worth Talking About? Information Theory Reveals How Children Balance Informativeness and Ease of Production

Colin Bannard, Marla Rosner, Danielle Matthews

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Of all the things a person could say in a given situation, what determines what is worth saying? Greenfield’s principle of informativeness states that right from the onset of language, humans selectively comment on whatever they find unexpected. In this article, we quantify this tendency using information-theoretic measures and report on a study in which we tested the counterintuitive prediction that children will produce words that have a low frequency given the context, because these will be most informative. Using corpora of child-directed speech, we identified adjectives that varied in how informative (i.e., unexpected) they were given the noun they modified. In an initial experiment (N = 31) and in a replication (N = 13), 3-year-olds heard an experimenter use these adjectives to describe pictures. The children’s task was then to describe the pictures to another person. As the information content of the experimenter’s adjective increased, so did children’s tendency to comment on the feature that adjective had encoded. Furthermore, our analyses suggest that children balance informativeness with a competing drive to ease production.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)954-966
Number of pages13
JournalPsychological Science
Volume28
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2017

Keywords

  • child language
  • information theory
  • language production
  • open data
  • open materials
  • pragmatics

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