scispace - formally typeset
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.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Young children’s understanding of another’s apparent crying and its relationship to theory of mind

TL;DR: The authors examined young children's understanding of apparent crying and its potentially misleading consequences, and found that children understand that one can simulate an emotion while feeling another, and that such a display can mislead others.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Social Cognitions of Victims of Bullying: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: This paper examined evidence for these three hypotheses on the relation between victimization and social information processing and concluded that victimization is related to a negative social-cognitive style, as shown by a more negative perception of peers in general and more negative situational attribution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intentionality, theoreticity and innateness

TL;DR: Goldman as discussed by the authors argues that self-knowledge is not a process of classifying, in the usual sense, at all; it rejects the model of ''IR/CR matching'' for cases of immediate self knowledge.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental evidence and introspection

TL;DR: Goldman as discussed by the authors showed that children can make use of adults' telling them they are in some state, and this fact, together with the use children can understand adults' stories of being in a state, overcomes the problems of RF at the learning stage in his sect.

Mentalization in DIR/Floortime: Facilitating reflective functioning in parents of children with developmental challenges

TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive literature review made more evident: 1) the wider applicability of DIR/Floortime to a range of conditions, not limited to Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), 2) that parents are the primary mutative agent in their child's life; 3) ASD symptomology creates obstacles to the parents' capacity to construct optimal social-emotional learning environments, which undermines parents' unique growth promoting role; and lastly 5) the cultivation of parental mentalization, through attachment-based interventions, must be a central component of the DIR
Related Papers (5)