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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:CBB Seminar ~ Peng Qian, PhD, Harvard University
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SUMMARY:CBB Seminar ~ Peng Qian, PhD, Harvard University
DESCRIPTION:<p>	<strong>Peng Qian, Ph.D. Harvard University Post-Doc</strong></p><p>	<strong>Loopholes: When and why people exploit the ambiguity of language</strong><br>Loopholes offer an opening. Rather than comply or directly refuse, people can subvert an intended request by an intentional misunderstanding. Such behaviors exploit ambiguity and under-specification in language. In this talk, I will present a series of studies of people's evaluation and expectation of loophole-engaging acts in everyday social interaction. I will describe a utility-theoretic recursive social reasoning model that formalizes and accounts for loopholes. The model implements the decision process of a loophole-aware listener, who trades off their own utility with that of the speaker, and considers an expected social penalty for non-cooperative behavior. The social penalty is computed through the listener's recursive reasoning about a virtual naive observer's inference of a naive listener's social intent. This model captures qualitative patterns in the human behavioral data and generates new quantitative predictions consistent with novel studies. I will conclude the talk with broader implications of this work on other aspects of social reasoning, including humor and deniability.</p><p>	 </p>
LOCATION:William James Hall ~ 1st fl Seminar room 105 - (Boxed lunch:11:45 a.m., across WJH Lobby in DOSS Lounge)
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20241010T160000Z
DTEND:20241010T171500Z
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