Gaining New Insights Into Mental States in Communication

Published on July 22, 2023

Imagine you and your friend are standing on opposite sides of a large field. You both have different perspectives of the field and what’s happening in it. Just like this scenario, the Multiple Perspectives Theory of mental states in communication suggests that mutual knowledge alone is not enough to support effective communication. Instead, our cognitive architecture includes separate representations of the self and others. These representations are continuously compared during conversation, allowing us to recognize both similarities and differences in perspective. This theory not only aligns with existing data and other cognitive findings, but it also offers exciting new predictions about how perspective impacts language use. By understanding the complex interplay between self and other perspectives, we can gain deeper insight into the dynamics of communication.

Abstract
Inspired by early proposals in philosophy, dominant accounts of language posit a central role for mutual knowledge, either encoded directly in common ground, or approximated through other cognitive mechanisms. Using existing empirical evidence from language and memory, we challenge this tradition, arguing that mutual knowledge captures only a subset of the mental states needed to support communication. In a novel theoretical proposal, we argue for a cognitive architecture that includes separate, distinct representations of the self and other, and a cognitive process that compares these representations continuously during conversation, outputting both similarities and differences in perspective. Our theory accounts for existing data, interfaces with findings from other cognitive domains, and makes novel predictions about the role of perspective in language use. We term this new account the Multiple Perspectives Theory of mental states in communication.

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