Timezone: »
Communication between a speaker and hearer will be most efficient when both parties make accurate inferences about the other. We study inference and communication in a television game called Password, where speakers must convey secret words to hearers by providing one-word clues. Our working hypothesis is that human communication is relatively efficient, and we use game show data to examine three predictions. First, we predict that speakers and hearers are both considerate, and that both take the other’s perspective into account. Second, we predict that speakers and hearers are calibrated, and that both make accurate assumptions about the strategy used by the other. Finally, we predict that speakers and hearers are collaborative, and that they tend to share the cognitive burden of communication equally. We find evidence in support of all three predictions, and demonstrate in addition that efficient communication tends to break down when speakers and hearers are placed under time pressure.
Author Information
Yang Xu (CMU)
Charles Kemp (Carnegie Mellon University)
More from the Same Authors
-
2011 Poster: Evaluating computational models of preference learning »
Alan Jern · Christopher G Lucas · Charles Kemp -
2011 Poster: Inductive reasoning about chimeric creatures »
Charles Kemp -
2011 Spotlight: Evaluating computational models of preference learning »
Alan Jern · Christopher G Lucas · Charles Kemp -
2011 Spotlight: Inductive reasoning about chimeric creatures »
Charles Kemp -
2009 Poster: Quantification and the language of thought »
Charles Kemp -
2009 Poster: Bayesian Belief Polarization »
Alan Jern · Kai-min K Chang · Charles Kemp -
2009 Spotlight: Quantification and the language of thought »
Charles Kemp -
2009 Poster: Abstraction and Relational learning »
Charles Kemp · Alan Jern -
2009 Session: Oral Session 4: Cognitive Science and EEG Analysis »
Charles Kemp -
2009 Spotlight: Abstraction and Relational learning »
Charles Kemp · Alan Jern -
2009 Poster: Individuation, Identification and Object Discovery »
Charles Kemp · Alan Jern · Fei Xu -
2008 Poster: An ideal observer model of infant object perception »
Charles Kemp · Fei Xu -
2007 Poster: A complexity measure for intuitive theories »
Charles Kemp · Noah Goodman · Josh Tenenbaum -
2006 Poster: Combining causal and similarity-based reasoning »
Charles Kemp · Patrick Shafto · Allison Berke · Josh Tenenbaum -
2006 Poster: Learning annotated hierarchies from relational data »
Daniel Roy · Charles Kemp · Vikash Mansinghka · Josh Tenenbaum -
2006 Talk: Learning annotated hierarchies from relational data »
Daniel Roy · Charles Kemp · Vikash Mansinghka · Josh Tenenbaum -
2006 Talk: Combining causal and similarity-based reasoning »
Charles Kemp · Patrick Shafto · Allison Berke · Josh Tenenbaum