Meaning & inference in case of conflict
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| Publication date | 2008 |
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| Book title | Proceedings of the 13th ESSLLI Student Session |
| Event | 13th ESSLLI Student Session (Hamburg, Germany) |
| Pages (from-to) | 65-74 |
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| Abstract |
This paper applies a model of boundedly rational "level-k thinking" (c.f. Stahl and Wilson, 1995; Crawford, 2003; Camerer, Ho and Chong, 2004) to a classical concern of game theory: when is information credible and what shall I do with it if it is not? The model presented here extends and generalizes recent work in game-theoretic pragmatics (Stalnaker, 2006; Jäger, 2007; Benz and van Rooij, 2007). Pragmatic inference is modeled as a sequence of iterated best responses, defined here in terms of the interlocutors' epistemic states. Credibility considerations are a special case of a more general pragmatic inference procedure at each iteration step. The resulting analysis of message credibility improves on previous game-theoretic analyses, is more general and places credibility in the linguistic context where it, arguably, belongs.
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| Document type | Conference contribution |
| Published at | http://staff.science.uva.nl/~kbalogh/StuS13/StuS13_Proceedings.pdf |
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