Logic List Mailing Archive

(Re)presenting the Speech of Others

13-14 Mar 2014
Groningen, The Netherlands

Call for Papers

(Re)presenting the Speech of Others

Conference Date: 13-14 March, 2014
Submission Deadline: 1 December, 2013
Venue: University of Groningen, the Netherlands
Organization: Franziska Kder & Emar Maier
Hosted by the ERC project BLENDS
Contact: f.koder@rug.nl
Web: https://sites.google.com/site/representing2014/


Conference Description

There are different ways of reporting what someone else has said. Common
forms of speech reports are direct speech (Mary said ?I am sick?) and
indirect speech (Mary said that she is sick). Pretense and role play are
closely related phenomena. Like in direct speech, someone engaging in role
play adopts the perspective of another person and produces utterances from
that shifted standpoint (I am sick) (Harris, 2000). Another interesting
parallel is that children start to use speech reports and to engage in role
play at around the same time, namely at two to three years of age. This is
well before they pass standard false belief tests (at around four) which are
often taken to be the hallmark of Theory of Mind and metarepresentation
(e.g. Perner, 1991). Since at least some forms of reported speech exhibit
recursion, intensionality, and/or clausal embedding, this developmental gap
may shed new light on the debate over the relationship between Theory of
Mind and the syntax/semantics of recursive embedding (e.g. de Villiers & de
Villiers, 2000). The aim of the conference is to discuss the cognitive and
conceptual relationship of reported speech, pretense and cognitive abilities
such as perspective-taking, metarepresentation and Theory of Mind.

Keynote speakers:
- Paul L. Harris
- Josef Perner
- Jill de Villiers


Submission details

We invite authors to submit an anonymous two-page abstract by 1 December,
2013, for a talk of 20 minutes plus 10 minutes discussion or a poster.
Submissions should be made via Easychair. We welcome theoretically and
empirically oriented contributions addressing some of the following topics
of interest from the perspectives of (psycho)linguistics, philosophy,
psychology or semantics.

Topics of Interest:
- Development of reported speech
- Development of pretense/ role play
- Direct and indirect speech
- Perspective shift, role shift, deictic/indexical shift
- Theory of Mind / mindreading
- Metacognition and metarepresentation