150 Psychologie
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Effective knowledge communication presupposes common ground (Clark & Brennan, 1991) that needs to be established and maintained. This is particularly difficult in remote communication as well as in non-interactive settings, because the speaker cannot use gestures or mimic and has to tailor his utterances to the addressee without receiving feedback. In these situations, the speaker may achieve mutual understanding for example by adopting the addressee’s perspective. We present a study conducted to test the impact of instructions that support and hinder individual problem solving and knowledge communication. We used a picture-sorting task requiring individual cognitive processes of feature search (Treisman & Gelade, 1980) in addition to referential communication. As our study focused on the design of utterances, all participants assumed the role of speaker. Participants were told that their descriptions would be recorded and then listened to later on by a participant in the role of addressee. Eight sets of pictures were used, which varied on two dimensions: the individual cognitive demands of detecting the relevant features (varied as between-subject factor) and the communicative demands (varied as within-subject factor). A further between-subject factor was the type of instructions: The participants received either a collaboration script as supporting instructions, or time pressure was applied to induce stress, or else they were given no additional instructions (control group). We used the speakers’ verbal utterances to examine the quality of the speakers’ descriptions. For both dimensions of difficulty, we found the expected effects. In the conditions with a collaboration script, there were fewer irrelevant features mentioned and fewer features were described with delay. In the conditions with time pressure, there were fewer irrelevant features described, but the number of correctly described pictures was impaired through the fact that relevant features were also neglected. Under time pressure, speakers tended to provide ambiguous descriptions regarding the frame of reference.
Klugheit wird gemeinhin als das Gegenteil von Torheit aufgefasst. Auf diese Weise erfährt sie eine sprachlich vorstrukturierte positive Bewertung und erhält einen ausgezeichneten gesellschaftlichen Status. "Positiv" bedeutet eine Verknüpfung mit spezifischen je gesellschaftlich richtigen Wertmassstäben, die aber in unterschiedlichen Milieus und Regionen durchaus verschieden ausfallen. Diese bilden den impliziten Subtext für die alltägliche Zuschreibung von "Klugheit". Klugheit fokussiert das Verhalten der Menschen, die Handlungen, die Performanz. Klugheit wird denjenigen Personen zugeschrieben, die "das Richtige" tun, und nachdem sie das Richtige getan haben, etabliert sich erst das Kriterium für die Richtigkeit dieser Beurteilung: der Ausgang der Geschichte. Klugheit wird zwar im vornhinein behauptet, stellt sich aber erst im Nachhinein heraus: denn sie misst sich nicht an der vorgeführten Handlung selbst, sondern am Ausgang der "Geschichte". Eine Bauerntochter handelt dann klug, wenn ihre Handlungen zu einem – im Sinne des Erzählers – guten Ende führen, zu einem Happy-End sozusagen. ...