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
Dissertation

Social skills and theory of mind in children with traumatic brain injury

S Paine
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the social competencies of children with traumatic brain injury (TBI) by investigating the predictors of social functioning and developing a measure of affective theory of mind (ToM).

Mind in practice : a pragmatic and interdisciplinary account of intersubjectivity

de Bruin, +1 more
TL;DR: The authors proposes that intersubjectivity is enabled through a large range of second-person practices: embodied practices allow us to employ various innate or early developing capacities that constitute a base line for social understanding, embedded practices enable us to understand others within a broader social and pragmatic context, and narrative practices provide us with stories about self and other in order to further fine-tune and sophisticate our intersubjective interactions.

Évaluation de l'intelligence sociale chez l'enfant. Présentation d'une échelle d'évaluation clinique EASE (échelle d'adaptation sociale chez l'enfant).

TL;DR: In this article, a population of enfants normaux of different tranches d'âge ont ete testes, and the result showed that cetablir des valeurs normatives for l'echelle EASE s'acquiert entre 3 and 5 ǫans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autistic children who create imaginary companions: Evidence of social benefits

TL;DR: This paper found that autistic children with imaginary friends were better able to understand others' minds and had stronger social skills than their peers without imaginary friends, regardless of their communication abilities and the children's language ability did not influence this.
Related Papers (5)