Since the beginning of the project I reached the training objectives described in the proposal: I acquired skills in programming web-based experiments in javascript/html and programmed experiments for data collection with adults and children. In addition, I attended a course on probabilistic modeling and implemented the methods taught in this course for the modeling objectives of WP3. By the end of the outgoing phase in June 2019, all data collection and modeling objectives have been reached. We collected data from adults and children for WP1 and WP2. We used this data to inform model parameters and generate model predictions as specified in WP3. We also collected data from adults and children for WP4, in which we test the model predictions from WP3 against empirical data. The results show that the hypothesized model, in which information sources are flexibly traded off with one another, accurately predicts the empirical data. Furthermore, this model explains the data better compared to alternative models that consider only one type of information. Parts of these results were presented at the Boston University Conference on Language Development in November 2018. The empirical study was presented at the Cognitive Science Society Conference in 2019, the Boston University Conference on Language Development in 2019, and at the Budapest CEU Conference on Cognitive Development in 2020. In sum, all objectives that have been proposed for the outgoing phase have been reached. The results have been written up (adults and children combined to increase the impact of the paper) and submitted for publication at the journal Cognition (current status: revise and resubmit). In addition, we completed a second study within the project in which we asked how common ground information is integrated with linguistic information. This study is structured in the same way as the study described in the proposal: We measured children's developing linguistic knowledge, expectations about speaker inforamtiveness, and sensitivity to common ground (analogous to WP 1 and 2). We then formalized the process by which these types of information should be integrated (WP4). Finally, we collected data from children in a task in which the three information sources were manipulated at a time (WP3). When we compared the data from this experiment to the predictions by the model, we found a close alignment between the model predictions and the data. Furthermore, we formulated a number of competitor models that explored different ways in which information sources could be integrated and how this process develops. The model that best predicted the data was one in which all information sources are part of an integrated inference process which is stable over time. The main locus of development is an increased sensitivity to the individual information sources. These results partially replicate, but also extend, the outcome of the first study. We are in the process of writing this second study up and will submit it for publication within the next month. As announced in the proposal, I also worked on a theoretical paper, which was published in December 2019 in the inaugural issue of Annual Review of Developmental Psychology. It reviews the literature on pragmatic reasoning in language learning and describes a new theoretical framework to synthesize different strands of the literature.