Language is not only used to transmit neutral information; we often seek to persuade by arguing in favor of a particular view. Persuasion raises a number of challenges for classical accounts of belief updating, as information cannot be taken at face value. How should listeners account for a speaker's "hidden agenda" when incorporating new information? Here, we extend recent probabilistic models of recursive social reasoning to allow for persuasive goals and show that our model provides a pragmatic account for why weakly favorable arguments may backfire, a phenomenon known as the weak evidence effect. Critically, this model predicts a systematic relationship between belief updates and expectations about the information source: weak evidence should only backfire when speakers are expected to act under persuasive goals and prefer the strongest evidence. We introduce a simple experimental paradigm called the Stick Contest to measure the extent to which the weak evidence effect depends on speaker expectations, and show that a pragmatic listener model accounts for the empirical data better than alternative models. Our findings suggest further avenues for rational models of social reasoning to illuminate classical decision-making phenomena.
翻译:语言不仅被用于传递中性信息; 我们经常通过支持特定观点来寻求说服; 说服性意见为信仰更新的古典描述提出了诸多挑战, 因为信息不能以表面价值来看待。 在纳入新信息时, 听众应该如何解释发言者的“ 隐蔽议程 ”? 在这里, 我们推广最近的循环性社会推理概率模型, 以便实现有说服力的目标, 并表明我们的模型提供了一个务实的描述, 说明为什么弱小的有利论点可能会反弹, 一种被称为虚弱的证据效应的现象。 关键地说, 这个模型预测了信仰更新和对信息来源的期望之间的系统性关系: 弱证据只有在演讲者被期望在有说服力的目标下采取行动, 并更倾向于最强的证据时, 才会产生反弹。 我们引入了一个简单的实验性范例, 称为“ 争斗棍”, 以衡量弱证据效应在多大程度上取决于演讲者的期望, 并显示务实的倾听者模型将经验数据描述得比替代模型更好。 我们的研究结果建议了为社会理性推理模式提供进一步的渠道, 来说明典型的决策现象。