Children's understanding of social-cognitive and social-communicative aspects of discourse irony.

Child Dev

Institute of Phonetics, Faculty of Arts, Charles, University in Prague, Nám. J. Palacha 2, 116 38 Prague 1, CzechRepublic.

Published: October 2010

To bridge the social-reasoning focus of developmental research on irony understanding and the pragmatic focus of research with adult populations, this cross-sectional study examines 5-, 7-, and 9-year-olds' (n = 72) developing understanding of both social-cognitive and social-communicative aspects of discourse irony, when compared with adults (n = 24). Although 5-year-olds lag behind the other age groups in their reasoning about the speaker's meaning, belief, intention, and motivation, adults are consistently superior to children of all ages on these social-cognitive measures. In contrast, limited age-related differences were found in participants' judgment of the social-communicative function of irony (how nice, mean, and funny irony is). The findings help to reconcile previous discrepant claims as to the age when children come to understand irony.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8624.2010.01442.xDOI Listing

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