Title: Polarity Items in Questions
1Polarity Itemsin Questions
- Manfred KrifkaHumboldt Universität zu Berlin
- Zentrum für Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft, Berlin
- Korean Society of Language and Information
ConferenceInha UniversityIncheon, KoreaJune
28, 2003
2Negative Polarity Items in Questions
- Ann Borkin 1971, Polarity Items in Questions,
CLS 7 - Did Mary ever lift a finger to help you?
- Who ever lifted a finger to help you?
- gt Rhetorical questions, expected answer No. /
Noone. - Have you ever been to China?
- Which student has ever been to China?
- gt Information-seeking questions.
3Syntactic Accounts of NPIs in Questions
- Syntactic account of NPIsE. Klima 1964,
Negation in English, C. L. Baker 1970, Double
negativesM. C. Linebarger 1980, The grammar of
negative polarityL. Progovac 1987, A
binding-theoretic approach to polarity
sensitivity - NPIs have to stand in construction with (be
c-commanded by) a trigger,the classical trigger
is negation.Mary lifted a finger to help
you.Mary didnt lift a finger to help you. - NPIs in questions can be explained by question
morpheme Qwhich is just another trigger
(Progovac)Did Mary lift a finger to help you?Q
did Mary lift a finger to help you? - Q triggers Subj/Aux-inversion in English, may be
realized as a particle or a morpheme in other
languages. - This may explain why we dont find NPIs in
non-inverted questions(they lack a question
morpheme), R. Huddlestone 1994.Mary lifted a
finger to help you???You have ever been to
China? - But Why is the question morpheme a trigger? Why
not, e.g., the imperative?Lift a finger to help
me!
4Derivative Licensing of NPIs in Questions
- NPIs might also be licensed by way of entailments
(C. L. Baker 1970).John was surprised that Mary
said anything.gt John expected that Mary did
not say anything. - This can explain why we find NPIs in rhetorical
questionsThey expect a negative answer, which
may be an entailment. - Did Mary ever lift a finger to help you?gt I
believe that Mary did not ever lift a finger to
help you. - Who ever lifted a finger to help you?gt I
believe that no-one ever lifted a finger to help
you. - The NPI might serve an indication that a negative
answer is expected,hence be a marker for
rhetorical questions. - But no explanation why NPIs also occur in
information-seeking questions - Have you ever been to China?/gt I believe that
you have not ever been to China. - Which student has ever been to China?/gt I
believe that no student has ever been to China.
5Problems with NPIs in Questions Semantic Accounts
- Semantic Accounts of NPIsB. Ladusaw 1979,
Polarity sensitivity as inherent scope relations - NPIs occur in downward-entailing contexts
- Mary hasnt been to China last year
- last month ? last year
- gt Mary hasnt been to China last month.
- hence Mary hasnt been to China ever.
- Every student who has been to China last year
enjoyed it.last month ? last yearEvery student
who has been to China last month enjoyed
it.hence Every student who has ever been to
China enjoyed it. - NPIs in questions?Ladusaw assumes derivative
licensing in rhetorical questionsthat entail a
negated answer. - ProblemNo treatment of NPIs in
information-seeking questions.
6Problems with NPIs in Questions Fauconnier
- G. Fauconnier 1975, Polarity and the scale
principleNPIs are associated with ordered
alternatives (scales) and denote the minimal
elements of the scales. - a drop associated with amounts of liquid,
ordered by size lt denotes the minimal amount
of liquid. - Negated proposition concerning a minimal element
of a scalewill negate proposition concerning
non-minimal elements - John didnt drink a drop of alcohol gt John
didnt drink a quantity x of alcohol(for any
quantities of alcohol x). - NPIs in questionsFauconnier 1980, Pragmatic
entailment and question.Did John drink a drop of
alcohol?Speaker wonders, whether John drank a
drop of alcohol. - Roughly If Speaker has disbelief whether John
drank a minimal quantity, he also has disbelief
whether John drank more substantial quantities. - ProblemAgain, this only explains NPIs in
rhetorical questions.
7A Semantic / Pragmatic Account for NPIs in
Questions
- Elaboration onKrifka 1995, The semantics and
pragmatics of polarity items - Following FauconnierNPIs introduce ordered
alternativesand denote the minimal alternative. - Alternatives dont have to be ordered linearly.
- Different types of alternative sets and polarity
items - a drop (cf. Fauconnier) - denotes the set of
minimal liquid entities, - is associated with
the set of quantities of liquid (sets of
liquid of the same size), - this set is ordered
by size of quantities. - ever - denotes the set of all (relevant) times
T, - is associated with subsets of T T T ?
T, ordered by subset relation ?.
8Principles for dealing with alternatives in
assertions
- The Principle of Motivated Introduction of
Alternatives (MIA) - If an assertion ? is made, where ? comes
with an alternative set A,and hence ?
comes with alternative assertions ? , with
? ? A(cf. alternative semantics Hamblin 1973,
Rooth 1985) - then the speaker must have reasons-- to
introduce the alternative assertions ? --
not to assert any alternative assertion ? . - Example Focus, John gave MARY the necklace.
- Alternatives John gave Sue the necklace, John
gave Jill the necklace... - Reason of introducing these alternative
assertionsCoherence with explicit or implicit
question, Who did John give the necklace? - Reason not to assert these alternative
assertionsSpeaker knows that they are false.
9Principles for dealing with alternatives in
assertions
- Example Scalar Implicature
- John ate three eggs.
- Alternatives (as number words form a Horn
scale)... John ate two eggs, John ate three
eggs, John ate four eggs, ... - Alternatives stand in logical relationship to
each other - John ate four eggs gt John ate three eggs gt
John ate two eggs - Why are alternative assertions introduced?Speaker
indicates he is aware of being able to make
stronger or weaker claims. - Why are alternative assertions not made?-- For
weaker assertions They are not the strongest
defendable claims (Grices first submaxim of
Quantity)-- For stronger assertions Speaker
lacks evidence for their truth (Grices maxim
of Quality) - Implicature of Negating Stronger Alternatives
(NSA) If a speaker introduces stronger claims
as alternativesbut explicity doesnt assert
them,it can be assumed that he considers them to
be false. - NSA implicature in our example ?John ate four
eggs, ?John ate five eggs, ?John ate six eggs,
...
10The MIA and NSA principles and Negative Polarity
Items
- NPIs in downward entailing contextsMary hasnt
ever been to China. - AlternativesMary hasnt been to China last
year.Mary hasnt been to China the year before
last year.Mary hasnt been to China in the last
five years.... - Alternatives stand in logical relationship to (at
least) the assertion made - Mary hasnt been to China at any timegt Mary
hasnt been to China last year Mary hasnt been
to China the year before last year, ... - Why are alternative assertions introduced?Speaker
indicates being aware of being able to make
stronger or weaker claims. - Why are alternatives not asserted?As they are
all weaker They are not the strongest defendable
claims. - No NSA implicature, as there are no stronger
alternative assertions. -
11The MIA and NSA principles and Negative Polarity
Items
- NPIs in upward entailing contextsMary has ever
been to China. - AlternativesMary has been to China last
year.Mary has been to China the year before last
year.Mary has been to China in the last five
years.... - Alternatives stand in logical relationship to (at
least) the assertion madeMary has been to China
last yearMary has been to China the year before
last year, gt Mary has been to China some
time. - Why are alternative assertions introduced?Speaker
indicates being aware of being able to make
stronger or weaker claims. - Why are alternatives not asserted?As they are
all stronger Standardly, because speaker
considers them false. - NSA implicature systematically contradicts the
assertion madeAssertion made Mary has been to
China some time.NSA implicature ?Mary has been
to China last year, ?Mary has been to
China the year before last year, ...
12The MIA principle in Questions
- We apply the same general interpretation
principle as with assertions - If an question Q ? is asked, where ? comes
with an alternative set A,and hence Q ?
comes with alternative questions Q ? , with
? ? A - then the speaker must have reasons
- -- to introduce the alternative questions Q ?
-- not to ask any alternative assertion Q ?
. - Example Focus in questions.
- What did John give to MARYF as a birthday
present? - Alternative questions What did John give to Sue
as a birthday present?What did John give to Bill
as a birthday present? etc. - Why are these alternative questions
introduced?Speaker indicates he is aware that
these questions are also potentially relevant,
e.g. as questions under discussion (Roberts
1995, Büring 1998). - Why are these alternatives not asked?The speaker
might know the answer already, or might indicate
that he considers this question more important.
13NPIs in Rhetorical Questions
- Did John drink a drop of liquor?
- Meaning Did John drink a minimal quantity of
liquor? - Alternatives ...Did John drink a glass of
liquor?,Did John drink 2 grams of liquor?... - Why are the alternative questions
introduced?Speaker indicates being aware of
being able to ask more or less inquisitive
questions. - Why are the alternatives not asked?
- Possible answers
- -- Borkin 1971 Because their answers are already
known (and negative). - The question presupposes that John didnt
drink any substantial quantity of liquorand just
asks whether he drank a minimal amount. - -- Because the speaker is so sure that the answer
is negativethat he asks a question that has very
low a-priori chances to be answered positively.
14NPIs in Rhetorical Questions
- According to this theory, the speaker asks a
risky questionSpeaker wants to claim John
didnt drink any liquor, and makes it as easy
as possible to the hearer to say John drank
some liquor. - The Handicap Principle Zahawi Zahawi (1997)
The handicap principle. Oxford University Press. - Examples of handicap principle in animal
communication - Gazelles jumping up and down in sight of
predatorsto prove that they are strong enough to
outrun them - Male dominance features like antlers, showy
feathers. - Examples in non-linguistic human communication
- Conspicuous consumption
- Examples in linguistic communication
- Rhetorical questions
- Elaborate text and speech genres
- Politeness phenomena
15NPIs in Information-Seeking Questions
- Has Bill ever smoked marihuana?
- Meaning Is there a time t ? T such that Bill
smoked marihuana at t?i.e. Is there a time at
which Bill smoked marihuana? - Alternatives Is there a time t ? T such that
Bill smoked marihuana at t?where T ranges over
(relevant) subsets of T, i.e. Has Bill smoked
marihuana last year? Has Bill smoked marihuana
the year before last year? ... - Why are the alternative questions
introduced?Speaker indicates he is aware of
being ableto ask more specific questions. - Why are the alternative questions not
asked?Because they dont fit the informational
needs of the speakeras well as the question that
is asked. - By this, speaker indicates that he does not know,
for any time t, whether Bill smoked marihuana at
t.
16NPIs in Information-Seeking Questions
- More systematically (cf. Krifka 1995)the
speaker doesnt ask the more specific
questionsbecause they dont satisfy the current
informational needas well as the question that
is actually askedSpeaker optimizes the
potential utility of the question. - One way of optimizing question utilityUtility
is greatest if every possible answer to the
question yields a similar amount of information - (We call this equilibrium of the question).
- Example
- S1 draws a card from a deck of cards,S2 has to
find out with yes/no questions which card it is,
using as few questions as possible. - An uneconomical question Is it the seven of
diamonds?- A yes would be highly informative, -
but a no would be much more likely, and be highly
uninformative. - A more economical question Is it a diamonds?
- A most economical question Is it a diamonds or a
heart?(The two possible answers are equally
likely and yield the same amount of information.)
17NPIs in Information-Seeking Questions van Rooys
Implementation
- Robert van Rooy 2002, Negative Polarity Items in
questions Strength as relevance - makes these ideas precise within a general
framework for scalar implicaturesthat replaces
logical entailment by the more general notion of
increased likelihood. - Probability of propositions P(q) ? 0 ... 1
- Probability and information valueThe greater
the probability of a proposition,the lower its
information value. - A convenient measure of information,cf. Carnap
Bar-Hillel (1952), An outline of a theory of
semantic informationThe information of a
proposition q inf(q) log2(P(q)),i.e.
the information of q is the negative logarithm
with base 2 of the probability of q.
18Inf(q)
If P(q) 1/4, then inf(q) 2
if P(q) ? 0then inf(q) ? ?
y -log2 x
inf(A) -log2 P(A)
If P(q) 1/2,then inf(q) 1
The smaller the probability, the greater the
information.
If P(q) 1,then inf(q) 0
If p, q are independent of each other, then
inf(p?q) inf(p) inf(q),
Example P(p) P(q) 1/2, inf(p) inf(q) 1,
P(p ? q) 1/4, inf(p ? q) 2
19NPIs in Information-Seeking Questions van Rooys
Implementation
- Equilibrium of a question
- Assume that a question meaning is a set of
mutually exclusive propositionsthat cover all
possible states of affairs(the potential answers
of the question cf. Groenendijk Stohkhofs
theory). - The equilibrium of the question increasesif the
average utility of the potential answers
increases. - For particular potential answers, this meansIf
the answer is unlikely, then at least its
information should be high. - One possible way of implementing equilibrium of a
questionis by (Shannons) EntropyE(Q) ?
P(q) inf(q) q ? QThe
entropy/equilibrium of a question Qis the sum of
the probability times the informationof all
possible answers to Q.
20NPIs in Information-Seeking Questions van Rooys
Implementation
- Equilibrium / Entropie of QuestionE(Q) ?
P(q) inf(q) q ? Q - Example Q q, ?q (typical for
yes/no-questions) - We have P(?q) 1 P(q).
Maximal entropyP(q) P(?q) 0,5
entropy ? 0if P(q) ? 1 or P(q) ? 0
21NPIs in Information-Seeking Questions van Rooys
Implementation
- Basic idea of the function of NPIs in questions
- The presence of an NPI indicatesthat the
question with the NPI meaningis less biased,is
more balanced, has a greater equilibrium
between the potential answers, than any
alternative induced by the NPI.
22NPIs in Information-Seeking Questions Examples
- ExampleDid Bill ever smoke marihuana?Did Bill
smoke marihuana last year? - Assume for the sake of illustration
- -- We restrict our attention to the last ten
years. - -- A-priori-likelihood that you smoked marihuana
in any given year 0,1 it follows a-priori
likelihood for the last 10 years 0,65
23NPIs in Information-Seeking Questions Examples
- ExampleDid Bill ever smoke marihuana?Did Bill
smoke marihuana last year? - Assume for the sake of illustration
- -- We restrict our attention to the last ten
years. - -- A-priori-likelihood that you smoked marihuana
in any given year 0,1 it follows a-priori
likelihood for the last 10 years 0,65
Scenario 1 No additional assumption. Then P(Bill
ever ( in the last 10 years) smoked marihuana)
0,65,hence E(Did Bill ever smoke marihuana?)
0,93. And P(Bill smoked marihuana last year)
0,1,hence E(Did Bill smoke marihuana last year?)
0,496. Hence Did Bill smoke marihuana last
year? is less balanced, and Did Bill ever smoke
marihuana? is felicitous.
24NPIs in Information-Seeking Questions Examples
- ExampleDid Bill ever smoke marihuana?Did Bill
smoke marihuana last year? - Assume for the sake of illustration
- -- We restrict our attention to the last ten
years. - -- A-priori-likelihood that you smoked marihuana
in any given year 0,1 it follows a-priori
likelihood for the last 10 years 0,65
Scenario 2 P(Bill smoked marihuana before last
year) 1, i.e. it is known that Bill smoked
Marihuana before last year. Then P(Bill ever (
in the last 10 years) smoked marihuana)
1,hence E(Did Bill ever smoke marihuana?)
0. And P(Bill smoked marihuana last year)
0,1,hence E(Did Bill smoke marihuana last year?)
0,496. Hence Did Bill smoke marihuana last
year? is more balanced, and Did Bill ever smoke
marihuana? is infelicitous.
25NPIs in Information-Seeking Questions Examples
- ExampleDid Bill ever smoke marihuana?Did Bill
smoke marihuana last year? - Assume for the sake of illustration
- -- We restrict our attention to the last ten
years. - -- A-priori-likelihood that you smoked marihuana
in a given year 0,1 it follows a-priori
likelihood for the last 10 years 0,65
Scenario 3 P(Bill smoked marihuana before last
year) 0, i.e. it is known that Bill didnt
smoke marihuana before last year. Then P(Bill
ever ( in the last 10 years) smoked marihuana)
0,1,hence E(Did Bill ever smoke marihuana?)
0,496. And P(Bill smoked marihuana last year)
0,1,hence E(Did Bill smoke marihuana last year?)
0,496. Hence Did Bill smoke marihuana last
year? is equally balanced, and Did Bill ever
smoke marihuana? is mildly infelicitous,as it
doesnt increase equilibrium.
26NPIs in Information-Seeking Questions Examples
- Prediction Usage of NPIs in information-seeking
questionsdepends on a-priori likelihood. - (a) Did you ever have tuberculosis?
- (b) Did you ever have the common cold?
- Assume a-priori probability of getting
tuberculosis in a year is 0,01,a-priori
probability of getting the common cold in a year
is 0,5
27NPIs in Information-Seeking Questions Examples
- Prediction Usage of NPIs in information-seeking
questionsdepends on a-priori likelihood. - (a) Did you ever have tuberculosis?
- (b) Did you ever have the common cold?
- Assume a-priori probability of getting
tuberculosis in a year is 0,01,a-priori
probability of getting the common cold in a year
is 0,5,you are 10 years old.
P(you ever (in the last 10 years) had
tuberculosis) 0,0956, hence E(Did you
ever have tuberculosis?) 0,4549 P(you had
tuberculosis last year) 0,01, hence
E(Did you have tuberculosis last year?) 0,0808
dispreferred! P(you ever (in the last 10
years) had the common cold) 0,9990,
hence E(Did you ever have the common cold?)
0,0114 P(you had the common cold last year)
0,5, hence E(Did you have the common
cold last year?) 1 preferred!
28NPIs in Biased Questions
- Positively biased questions do not allow for
NPIs.Cf. declarative questions without
Subj/Aux inversion, Did you have the common
cold? (unbiased) You had the common cold?
(biased towards positive answer)(Gunlogson
2001, True to form Rising and falling
declaratives as questions in English). - Observation No NPIs in such questions,especiall
y in the presence of question tags. ??You ever
had the common cold? You ever had the common
cold, didnt you? - Negatively biased questions do allow for NPIsCf.
questions in German with particle dennHaben Sie
denn jemals Tuberkulose gehabt?Did you DENN
ever have tuberculosis?
29NPIs used to accommodate equilibrium assumptions
- We assumeAssumptions about probablities of
potential answersis crucial for the
understanding of questions. - ButContext and background knowledgeoften does
not determine probablities of potential answers. - HenceThe speaker may suggest a range for
probabilities of potential answersby using a NPI
in the question(accomodation of a range for
probabilities of potential answers). - ExampleA doctor examins a person, who appears
extremely healthy.Doctor Did you ever have the
common cold? - Use of the NPI ever suggests a relatively low
likelihoodthat addressee had the common cold.
30NPIs in Constituent Questions
- Which student has ever been to China?
- Assume There are two students, John, Mary
- To compute entropy, we have to work with
partitions as question meanings-- Theory of
Groenendijk / Stokhof-- or intersection of
Hamblin style meanings of questions
31NPIs in Constituent Questions
- Assume A-priori-likelihood of a student being in
China in a given year 0,01 - For any given year xP(John and Mary have been
to China in x) 0,0001P(Only John has been to
China in x) 0,0099P(Only Mary has been to
China in x) 0,0099P(Neither John nor Mary have
been to China in x) 0,9801 - For 10 yearsP(John and Mary have been to China
in the last 10 years) 0,0091P(Only John has
been to China in the last 10 years)
0,0086P(Only Mary has been to China in the last
10 years) 0,0086P(Neither John nor Mary have
been to China in the last 10 years) 0,8179
32Rhetorical Questions, Once More
- Van Rooy distinguishes
- -- information-seeking questions with
NPIs(explanation optimizing questions by
de-biasing) - -- rhetorical questions,for which he proposes a
theory along the lines of Kadmon Landman 1993,
Any. - Basic assumption any widens the domain of a
noun. - A I dont have potatoes.B Do you perhaps have
just a few that I could fry in my room?A Im
sorry, I dont have ANY potatoes. - NPIs in rhetorical questions
- Did Mary drink a drop of alcohol?
- Indicates (cf. also Borkin 1971) -- The
question Did Mary drink a quantity x of alcohol?
is already settled for the standard values of
x, i.e. the alternatives of x. - -- The domain is now broadened so to
include even minimal quantities of alcohol.
33Rhetorical Questions, Once More
- A slightly different view
- Assume that the information state assigns to the
propositionMary drank a quantity x of
alcoholvery small probabilities, for all
substantial quantities of alcohol x. - We then haveE(Mary drank a quantity x of
alcohol, - ?Mary drank a quantity x of alcohol) ?
0, that is, the entropy is very small, for
substantial acts of labor x. - To increase the entropy of the question, the
speaker asks the extreme questionMary drank a
minimal quantity x of alcohol, ?Mary drank a
minimal quantity x of alcohol - While the entropy of this question is still very
small, it is greater than with all of the
alternatives. - Cf. the previous argumentation that the speaker
makes it as easy for the hearerto give a
positive answer as possible.
34Polarity Items in Questions
- Slides can soon be downloaded at
- www.amor.hu-berlin.de/h2816i3x
- (Talks)