“…It is relevant to a diverse number of psychological phenomena. Some phenomena that already have received attention include children's acquisition of pretend identities (Taylor, Carlson, Maring, Gerow, & Charley, 2004), childhood imagination (e.g., D. G. Singer & Singer, 1990), theory of mind (Taylor & Carlson, 1997), children's reality testing (Bourchier & Davis, 2002), creativity (Kalyan-Masih, 1978), social development (e.g., Bouldin & Pratt, 1999;Gleason, 2002Gleason, , 2004b), children's coping (Taylor, 1999), coping in the elderly (Leger, 1987;Leger, Garoux, Tessier, & Chevalier, 1986;O'Mahony, Shulman, & Silver, 1984), delusional disorders (Von Broembsen, 1986), language development (Bouldin, Bavin, & Pratt, 2002;Piaget, 1955), characteristics of gifted children (Terman, 1926), object relations (Green, 1922), dissociation and dissociative identity disorder (Allison, 1998;Pica, 1999;Sanders, 1992;Silberg, 1998;Trujillo, Lewis, Yeager, & Gidlow, 1996), and even pretense by animals (Mitchell, 2002). A potentially unique contribution of pretend companions to understanding children's (and adults') behaviors is that they are naturally emitted by children.…”