What makes a question useful? What makes an answer appropriate?
In this paper, we formulate a family of increasingly
sophisticated models of question-answer behavior within the
Rational Speech Act framework. We compare these models
based on three different pieces of evidence: first, we demonstrate
how our answerer models capture a classic effect in psycholinguistics
showing that an answerer’s level of informativeness
varies with the inferred questioner goal, while keeping
the question constant. Second, we jointly test the questioner
and answerer components of our model based on empirical evidence
from a question-answer reasoning game. Third, we examine
a special case of this game to further distinguish among
the questioner models. We find that sophisticated pragmatic
reasoning is needed to account for some of the data. People
can use questions to provide cues to the answerer about their
interest, and can select answers that are informative about inferred
interests.