Preschoolers can recognize violations of the Gricean maxims.

Grice (Syntax and semantics: Speech acts, 1975, pp. 41-58, Vol. 3) proposed that conversation is guided by a spirit of cooperation that involves adherence to several conversational maxims. Three types of maxims were explored in the current study: 1) Quality, to be truthful; 2) Relation, to say only what is relevant to a conversation; and 3) Quantity, to provide as much information as required. Three- to five-year-olds were tested to determine the age at which an awareness of these Gricean maxims emerges. Children requested the help of one of two puppets in finding a hidden sticker. One puppet always adhered to the maxim being tested, while the other always violated it. Consistently choosing the puppet that adhered to the maxim was considered indicative of an understanding of that maxim. The results indicate that children were initially only successful in the Relation condition. While in general, children performed better at first in the Quantity condition compared with the Quality condition, 3-year-olds never performed above chance in the Quantity condition. The findings of the present study indicate that preschool children are sensitive to the violation of the Relation, Quality, and Quantity maxims at least under some conditions.

[1]  Julie C. Sedivy,et al.  Evidence of Perspective-Taking Constraints in Children's On-Line Reference Resolution , 2002, Psychological science.

[2]  B. Ackerman When is a question not answered? The understanding of young children of utterances violating or conforming to the rules of conversational sequencing , 1981 .

[3]  J. Bowey Syntactic awareness and verbal performance from preschool to fifth grade , 1986 .

[4]  J. A. Becker Bossy and Nice Requests: Children's Production and Interpretation , 1986 .

[5]  D. Sperber,et al.  Pragmatics, Modularity and Mind-reading (To appear in Mind and Language) , 2001 .

[6]  P. Dunham,et al.  The Confused Robot: Two-Year-Olds’ Responses to Breakdowns in Conversation , 2000 .

[7]  P. Dunham,et al.  Two‐year‐olds’ sensitivity to a parent's knowledge state: Mind reading or contextual cues? , 2000 .

[8]  Daniela K. O'Neill,et al.  Two‐Year‐Old Children's Sensitivity to a Parent's Knowledge State When Making Requests , 1996 .

[9]  I. Noveck When children are more logical than adults: experimental investigations of scalar implicature , 2001, Cognition.

[10]  Frank C Keil,et al.  Early understanding of the division of cognitive labor. , 2002, Child development.

[11]  E. Markman,et al.  Appearance questions can be misleading: A discourse-based account of the appearance–reality problem , 2005, Cognitive Psychology.

[12]  L. Surian Do children exploit the Maxim of Antecedent in order to interpret ambiguous descriptions? , 1991, Journal of Child Language.

[13]  D. Sperber,et al.  Relevance: Communication and Cognition , 1989 .

[14]  M. Siegal,et al.  Breaking the mold: A fresh look at children's understanding of questions about lies and mistakes. , 1996 .

[15]  Michael Siegal,et al.  Language and thought: the fundamental significance of conversational awareness for cognitive development , 1999 .

[16]  S. Jackson,et al.  Ambiguity and implicature in children's discourse comprehension , 1982, Journal of Child Language.

[17]  E. Robinson,et al.  Children's suggestibility in relation to their understanding about sources of knowledge. , 2003, Child development.

[18]  Siobhan Chapman Logic and Conversation , 2005 .

[19]  L. Camras,et al.  Children's understanding of conversational principles , 1984 .

[20]  K. Bussey Lying and Truthfulness: Children's Definitions, Standards, and Evaluative Reactions , 1992 .

[21]  J. Gleason,et al.  I'm sorry I said that: apologies in young children's discourse , 2006, Journal of Child Language.

[22]  A. Pellegrini,et al.  Children's Conversational Competence with Their Parents. , 1987 .

[23]  S. Brédart Children's interpretation of referential ambiguities and pragmatic inference , 1984, Journal of Child Language.

[24]  P. Harris,et al.  Preschoolers mistrust ignorant and inaccurate speakers. , 2005, Child development.

[25]  M. Siegal Knowing Children: Experiments in Conversation and Cognition , 1991 .

[26]  A. Papafragou,et al.  Scalar implicatures: experiments at the semantics–pragmatics interface , 2003, Cognition.

[27]  Amanda H. Waterman,et al.  Indicating when you do not know the answer: The effect of question format and interviewer knowledge on children's ‘don't know’ responses , 2004 .

[28]  Children's over-regularization of nouns and verbs. , 1989, Journal of child language.