Session 3
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This talk will discuss proposals for modeling conversational exchanges without invoking common ground. ReferenceSimons, M. (2025). Availability without common ground. Linguistics and Philosophy, 48(1), 179–211. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10988-024-09426-4
RéférencesHeller, D. and Brown-Schmidt, S. (2023), The Multiple Perspectives Theory of Mental States in Communication. Cognitive Science, 47: e13322. https://doi.org/10.1111/cogs.13322Daphna Heller, Sarah Brown-Schmidt; Mental states are the essence of pragmatics: questions, answers and the Multiple Perspectives Theory of communication. Philos Trans R Soc Lond...
Common ground is the information that interlocutors treat as true and shared for the purpose of their interaction. I will highlight the fact that some of what we treat as common ground comes apart from what we believe, and some of it we treat as true only for certain conversational purposes. This will lead to a discussion of conversation plans in general. Références ...
Julia Witte Zimmerman, Calla Glavin Beauregard, Parisa Suchdev, Tabia Tanzin Prama, Elisabeth Kollrack, and Kathryn Cramer:The strong version of the “stochastic parrot” argument claims that, although large language models (LLMs) exceed rote regurgitation - e.g. by generating plausible neologisms - they cannot move beyond statistical pattern matching into abstraction or reasoning, remaining ontologically near the lower bound of ...