1. What are the contributions in "From scalar semantics to implicature: children’s interpretation of aspectuals*" ?
Here the authors investigate experimentally the development of the semantics– pragmatics interface, focusing on Greek-speaking five-year-olds ’ interpretation of aspectual expressions such as arxizo ( ‘ start ’ ) and degree modifiers such as miso ( ‘ half ’ ) and mexri ti mesi ( ‘ halfway ’ ).. The authors discuss implications of these results for the scope and limitations of children ’ s ability to both acquire the lexical semantics of aspectuals and to compute implicatures as part of what the speaker means. [ * ]. Furthermore, children are better at spontaneously computing scalar implicatures than judging the pragmatic appropriateness of scalar statements.. I wish to thank Lila Gleitman, Chris Massey, Larry Horn, Laura Wagner, Ellen Prince, John Trueswell and Angeliek van Hout for comments and suggestions.
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2. What is the striking finding of the experiment?
Perhaps the most striking finding of their experiments is that children’s performance with SIs is not an all-or-nothing affair but depends on complex interactions of semantic and pragmatic factors.
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3. What is the main concern with the present design?
A possible concern with the present experimental design is that the derivation of SIs is removed from the contexts in which it most naturally occurs during actual conversations.
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4. What is the challenge of using experimental techniques with young children?
From a methodological perspective, the challenge is to create experimental techniques to be used with young children that explicitly seek to separate the contribution of semantics and pragmatics in the interpretation of natural language expressions.
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