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Addressing patients’ communication support needs through speech-language pathologist-nurse information-sharing: Employing ethnography to understand the acute stroke context
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A Systematic Review of Studies Describing the Effectiveness, Acceptability, and Potential Harms of Place-Based Interventions to Address Loneliness and Mental Health Problems
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Is Early Bilingual Experience Associated with Greater Fluid Intelligence in Adults?
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Time for talk: The work of reflexivity in developing empirical understanding of speech and language therapist and nursing interaction on stroke wards
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Generic learning mechanisms can drive social inferences: The role of type frequency
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Animalizing women and feminizing men: The psychological intersections of human supremacism, sexism, and anti-veganism
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Learning from communication versus observation in great apes
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A socio-ecological perspective on the gestural communication of great ape species, individuals, and social units
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From Beethoven to Beyoncé : do changing aesthetic cultures amount to ‘cumulative cultural evolution’?
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Inferential communication : bridging the gap between intentional and ostensive communication in non-human primates
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Abstract:
This work was supported by the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013)/ERC Grant 609819 (SOMICS). ; Communication, when defined as an act intended to affect the psychological state of another individual, demands the use of inference. Either the signaler, the recipient, or both must make leaps of understanding which surpass the semantic information available and draw from pragmatic clues to fully imbue and interpret meaning. While research into human communication and the evolution of language has long been comfortable with mentalistic interpretations of communicative exchanges, including rich attributions of mental state, research into animal communication has balked at theoretical models which describe mentalized cognitive mechanisms. We submit a new theoretical perspective on animal communication: the model of inferential communication. For use when existing proximate models of animal communication are not sufficient to fully explain the complex, flexible, and intentional communication documented in certain species, specifically non-human primates, we present our model as a bridge between shallower, less cognitive descriptions of communicative behavior and the perhaps otherwise inaccessible mentalistic interpretations of communication found in theoretical considerations of human language. Inferential communication is a framework that builds on existing evidence of referentiality, intentionality, and social inference in primates. It allows that they might be capable of applying social inferences to a communicative setting, which could explain some of the cognitive processes that enable the complexity and flexibility of primate communication systems. While historical models of animal communication focus on the means-ends process of behavior and apparent cognitive outcomes, inferential communication invites consideration of the mentalistic processes that must underlie those outcomes. We propose a mentalized approach to questions, investigations, and interpretations of non-human primate communication. We include an overview of both ultimate and proximate models of animal communication, which contextualize the role and utility of our inferential communication model, and provide a detailed breakdown of the possible levels of cognitive complexity which could be investigated using this framework. Finally, we present some possible applications of inferential communication in the field of non-human primate communication and highlight the role it could play in advancing progress toward an increasingly precise understanding of the cognitive capabilities of our closest living relatives. ; Publisher PDF ; Peer reviewed
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Keyword:
Animal communication; BF; BF Psychology; Cognitive flexibility; Communication cognition; Inferential communication; Intentionality; Primates; Social cognition; Social inference; T-NDAS
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10023/24791 https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.718251
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Bo-NO-bouba-kiki : picture-word mapping but no spontaneous sound symbolic speech-shape mapping in a language trained bonobo
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The social and psychological work of metaphor: a corpus linguistic investigation
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Causal and associational language in observational health research: a systematic evaluation
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Is passive priming really impervious to verb semantics? a high-powered replication of Messenger Et al. (2012)
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Gestational age, parent education, and education in adulthood
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Prior experience with unlabeled actions facilitates 3-year-old children's verb learning
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COVID-19 first lockdown as a window into language acquisition : associations between caregiver-child activities and vocabulary gains
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'Now I am myself’: exploring how people with post-stroke aphasia experienced Solution Focused Brief Therapy within the SOFIA Trial
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Start with “Why,” but only if you have to: The strategic framing of novel ideas across different audiences
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