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Journal ArticleDOI

Three-year-olds' difficulty with false belief: The case for a conceptual deficit

TLDR
This paper showed that false-belief attribution is difficult for younger 3-year-olds despite their retention of essential facts and despite attempts to make expectations more explicit and prevent pragmatic misinterpretation.
Abstract
The hypothesis, that a conceptual limitation underlies 3-year-olds' difficulty with false-belief attribution (Wimmer & Perner, 1983), was tested against three competing hypotheses. These were: (1) failure to retain essential facts, (2) failure to understand the normal expectations which give rise to false belief and (3) pragmatic misinterpretation of the test question. Results showed that false-belief attribution remained difficult for younger 3-year-olds despite their retention of essential facts and despite attempts to make expectations more explicit and prevent pragmatic misinterpretation. These findings strengthen the original hypothesis, specified here as the inability to assign conflicting truth values to propositions. This hypothesis can explain why 3-year-olds find pretend play, the distinction between expected and achieved outcomes, the real-imaginary distinction and level 1 perspective taking easier to understand than false belief, the reality-appearance distinction and level 2 perspective taking.

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The Development of Theory of Mind According to False Belief Performance of Children Ages 3 to 5.

TL;DR: The authors examined the role of age in the false belief understanding in typically developing children and to determine if the different type of false belief tasks affects performance on false belief, and found that 3 year old children seemed to have developed an understanding of their own false belief before they developed a clear understanding of others' false belief.
Journal ArticleDOI

Expressing One’s Mind

TL;DR: The authors argue against any attempt to see such remarks as both reporting and expressing the same mental states, and that a correct account rests on distinguishing the truth conditions of such remarks from their conditions of use.
Journal ArticleDOI

The medium helps the message: Early sensitivity to auditory fluency in children's endorsement of statements.

TL;DR: The present study constitutes a first attempt to show that fluency, i.e., ease of processing, is recruited as a cue to guide epistemic decision in children.
Journal ArticleDOI

Current research findings on childhood autism.

TL;DR: Autism can teach us how the authors learn about emotions and the possibility of sensitive periods of development.
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