However, whether these findings should generalise to non-scalar implicatures is a theoretically contested issue. The main difference between cases such
as non-scalar (1) and scalar (2) is that, in the former case, the more informative alternative proposition can only be established with reference to context. By contrast, informational scales for expressions such as quantifiers (
et al., 2006, Katsos, 2008 and Katsos et al., 2005, and references therein). However, recent accounts of implicature differ as to whether these two types of implicature can be treated similarly. Default accounts of implicature (e.g. Chierchia, 2004 and Levinson, GSK1349572 concentration 2000) posit that implicatures arising from context-independent scales are linguistically and psycholinguistically privileged compared to fully context-dependent implicatures. Consequently, children are predicted to acquire the ability to process scalar implicatures earlier than non-scalar implicatures. For instance, Guasti et al. (2005) proposes that the scale
1991 and Sperber and Wilson, 1986/1995; i.a.) collapse the distinction between scalar and non-scalar implicatures on the grounds that both rely on contextually-specified expectations of informativeness. Preliminary empirical evidence that adjudicates between these two classes of account is available ( Papafragou & Tantalou, 2004; see Katsos (2009) for a critical discussion of the methodology), but the issue still remains open to comprehensive experimental investigation. The most frequently used paradigm for investigating the acquisition of implicature is the binary judgment task (Barner et al., 2011, Feeney et al., 2004, Foppolo et al., submitted for publication and Guasti et al., 2005; Katsos, 2009, Katsos et al., 2010, Noveck, 2001, Papafragou and Musolino, 2003, Papafragou and Tantalou, 2004 and Pouscoulous et al., 2007; among others. Many of these tasks are inspired by the Truth Value Judgment Task by Crain & Thornton, 1998). In this task, participants are asked to provide a binary judgment (typically ‘true’/‘false’ or ‘right’/‘wrong’) in cases where a situation is described using a less-than-optimally-informative statement. An example is the scenario in (3), where child participants are told that they are helping ‘Mr.