Dokument: Exploring the Guessing‐Game Experimental Paradigm: Inferences From Closed‐ Versus Open‐Ended Semantic Space

Titel:Exploring the Guessing‐Game Experimental Paradigm: Inferences From Closed‐ Versus Open‐Ended Semantic Space
URL für Lesezeichen:https://docserv.uni-duesseldorf.de/servlets/DocumentServlet?id=72771
URN (NBN):urn:nbn:de:hbz:061-20260331-121140-9
Kollektion:Publikationen
Sprache:Englisch
Dokumententyp:Wissenschaftliche Texte » Artikel, Aufsatz
Medientyp:Text
Autoren: Hartmann, Stefan [Autor]
Kuleshova, Svetlana [Autor]
Ćwiek, Aleksandra [Autor]
Pleyer, Michael [Autor]
Sibierska, Marta [Autor]
Placiński, Marek [Autor]
Blomberg, Johan [Autor]
Żywiczyński, Przemysław [Autor]
Wacewicz, Sławomir [Autor]
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Dateien vom 31.03.2026 / geändert 31.03.2026
Stichwörter:Understanding , Conceptual replication , Ecological validity , Experimental semiotics , Bayesian hierarchical modeling , Semantic space
Beschreibung:How we measure success in signal comprehension experiments fundamentally shapes our conclusions. Two recent studies have demonstrated that humans can guess the meanings of novel vocalizations and ape gestures above chance when selecting from limited alternatives. We replicated both experiments using open-ended responses instead of multiple choice. For the vocalization data,
where participants provided single-word or short-phrase responses, we systematically compared three evaluation methods applied to the same responses: exact matching, graded similarity ratings, and computational semantic similarity. For the gesture data, we applied graded similarity ratings.
Each evaluation method revealed a different semantic landscape. Participants’ success was very low when measured by exact matching, moderate by similarity ratings, and substantially greater by computational measures, which capture broader thematic connections. Despite these differences, a consistent pattern emerged across both datasets and all evaluation methods: success was determined primarily by properties of the signals (their semantic category and degree of transparency) rather than individual participant abilities. Participants often reliably distinguished broad categories (actions vs. objects, animals vs. artifacts) but rarely identified specific concepts—and these distinct patterns only
became visible through a combination of evaluation methods. In sum, our results partly align with the original studies yet also diverge in ways conducive to different conclusions about naïve humans’ ability to understand novel vocalizations or ape gestures. We show that closed- versus open-ended
response formats, and different evaluation scales, function as complementary research tools rather than competing approaches. Each reveals different aspects of how humans navigate semantic space when interpreting novel signals. Experimental and evaluation designs are, therefore, not a technical
detail but a theoretical choice about which semantic relationships we seek to expose.
Rechtliche Vermerke:Originalveröffentlichung:
Kuleshova, S., Ćwiek, A., Hartmann, S., Pleyer, M., Sibierska, M., Placiński, M., Blomberg, J., Żywiczyński, P., & Wacewicz, S. (2026). Exploring the Guessing‐Game Experimental Paradigm: Inferences From Closed‐ Versus Open‐Ended Semantic Space. Cognitive Science, 50(3), Article e70199. https://doi.org/10.1111/cogs.70199
Lizenz:Creative Commons Lizenzvertrag
Dieses Werk ist lizenziert unter einer Creative Commons Namensnennung 4.0 International Lizenz
Fachbereich / Einrichtung:Philosophische Fakultät
Dokument erstellt am:31.03.2026
Dateien geändert am:31.03.2026
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