A Metasemantic-Metapragmatic Framework for Taxonomizing Multimodal Communicative Alignment
Abstract
Drawing on contemporary pragmatist philosophy and linguistic theories on cognition, meaning, and communication, this paper presents a dynamic, metasemantic-metapragmatic taxonomy for grounding and conceptualizing human-like multimodal communicative alignment. The framework is rooted in contemporary developments of the three basic communicative capacities initially identified by American logician and pragmatist philosopher Charles Sanders Peirce: iconic (sensory and perceptual qualities), indexical (contextual and sociocultural associations), and rule-like (symbolic and intuitive reasoning). Expanding on these developments, I introduce the concept of indexical contextualization and propose the principle of "contextualization directionality" for characterizing the crucial metapragmatic capacity for maintaining, navigating, or transitioning between semantic and pragmatic modes of multimodal communication. I contend that current cognitive-social computational and engineering methodologies disproportionately emphasize the semantic/metasemantic domain, overlooking the pivotal role of metapragmatic indexicality in traversing the semantic-pragmatic spectrum of communication. The framework's broader implications for intentionality, identity, affect, and ethics in within-modal and cross-modal human-machine alignment are also discussed.
- Publication:
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arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- January 2025
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2501.01535
- Bibcode:
- 2025arXiv250101535J
- Keywords:
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- Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction;
- Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence;
- Computer Science - Computation and Language;
- Computer Science - Computers and Society
- E-Print:
- 34 pages, 1 figure, 3 tables. Draft presented at 2023 ZJU Logic and AI Summit EAI Workshop