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Irony and Perspective-Taking in Children: The Roles of Norm Violations and Tone of Voice

In order to understand most, if not any communicative act, the listener needs to make inferences about what the speaker intends to convey. This perspective-taking process is especially challenging in the case of nonliteral uses of language such as verbal irony (e.g., “Thanks for your help!” uttered...

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Autores principales: Köder, Franziska, Falkum, Ingrid Lossius
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8209259/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34149510
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.624604
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author Köder, Franziska
Falkum, Ingrid Lossius
author_facet Köder, Franziska
Falkum, Ingrid Lossius
author_sort Köder, Franziska
collection PubMed
description In order to understand most, if not any communicative act, the listener needs to make inferences about what the speaker intends to convey. This perspective-taking process is especially challenging in the case of nonliteral uses of language such as verbal irony (e.g., “Thanks for your help!” uttered to someone who has not provided the expected support). Children have been shown to have difficulties with the comprehension of irony well into the school years, but the factors that hamper or facilitate children’s perspective-taking in irony comprehension are not well understood. This study takes as its starting point the relevance-theoretic echoic analysis of verbal irony, and focuses on two of irony’s distinctive features as defined by this theory: (i) the normative bias and (ii) the characteristic tone of voice. In this study, we investigated the comprehension of irony in children aged 3–8. We manipulated these two factors, namely, the violation of different types of norms and the use of different tones of voice – to see how they affected children’s processing and interpretation of irony. Using an irony comprehension task that combined picture selection and eye-tracking, we found that the type of norm violation affected 4-to 5-year-olds’ offline understanding of irony, with a better performance on moral compared with social norm violations. Tone of voice had an effect on gaze behavior in adults, but not children, although a parodic, pretense-oriented tone of voice tended to lead to more looks to the angry compared with the happy emoticon at the offset of the ironical utterance, potentially facilitating children’s irony understanding. Our results show that the understanding of irony can be detected on explicit measures around age 6 – with the emergence of second-order perspective-taking abilities – but that a sensitivity to some of irony’s features can be detected several years earlier. Finally, our study provides a novel input to the debate on the existence of a so-called literal stage in pragmatic development, in particular regarding 3-year-olds’ differential performance on the offline and online measures of irony understanding, suggesting that they are not naively mistaking ironical utterances for “ordinary” literal ones.
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spelling pubmed-82092592021-06-18 Irony and Perspective-Taking in Children: The Roles of Norm Violations and Tone of Voice Köder, Franziska Falkum, Ingrid Lossius Front Psychol Psychology In order to understand most, if not any communicative act, the listener needs to make inferences about what the speaker intends to convey. This perspective-taking process is especially challenging in the case of nonliteral uses of language such as verbal irony (e.g., “Thanks for your help!” uttered to someone who has not provided the expected support). Children have been shown to have difficulties with the comprehension of irony well into the school years, but the factors that hamper or facilitate children’s perspective-taking in irony comprehension are not well understood. This study takes as its starting point the relevance-theoretic echoic analysis of verbal irony, and focuses on two of irony’s distinctive features as defined by this theory: (i) the normative bias and (ii) the characteristic tone of voice. In this study, we investigated the comprehension of irony in children aged 3–8. We manipulated these two factors, namely, the violation of different types of norms and the use of different tones of voice – to see how they affected children’s processing and interpretation of irony. Using an irony comprehension task that combined picture selection and eye-tracking, we found that the type of norm violation affected 4-to 5-year-olds’ offline understanding of irony, with a better performance on moral compared with social norm violations. Tone of voice had an effect on gaze behavior in adults, but not children, although a parodic, pretense-oriented tone of voice tended to lead to more looks to the angry compared with the happy emoticon at the offset of the ironical utterance, potentially facilitating children’s irony understanding. Our results show that the understanding of irony can be detected on explicit measures around age 6 – with the emergence of second-order perspective-taking abilities – but that a sensitivity to some of irony’s features can be detected several years earlier. Finally, our study provides a novel input to the debate on the existence of a so-called literal stage in pragmatic development, in particular regarding 3-year-olds’ differential performance on the offline and online measures of irony understanding, suggesting that they are not naively mistaking ironical utterances for “ordinary” literal ones. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-06-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8209259/ /pubmed/34149510 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.624604 Text en Copyright © 2021 Köder and Falkum. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychology
Köder, Franziska
Falkum, Ingrid Lossius
Irony and Perspective-Taking in Children: The Roles of Norm Violations and Tone of Voice
title Irony and Perspective-Taking in Children: The Roles of Norm Violations and Tone of Voice
title_full Irony and Perspective-Taking in Children: The Roles of Norm Violations and Tone of Voice
title_fullStr Irony and Perspective-Taking in Children: The Roles of Norm Violations and Tone of Voice
title_full_unstemmed Irony and Perspective-Taking in Children: The Roles of Norm Violations and Tone of Voice
title_short Irony and Perspective-Taking in Children: The Roles of Norm Violations and Tone of Voice
title_sort irony and perspective-taking in children: the roles of norm violations and tone of voice
topic Psychology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8209259/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34149510
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.624604
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