2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.dr.2015.07.005
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Evolution of human cooperation in Homo heidelbergensis: Teleology versus mentalism

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Cited by 32 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…A recent extensive meta-analysis showed that tasks of theory of mind, which heavily rely on imagining or understanding movement in order to infer intentions, strongly recruit bilateral pSTS (Schurz et al, 2014). This form of inference has been called teleological reasoning (Gergely and Csibra, 2003;Perner and Roessler, 2012) and is also present in primates (Myowa-Yamakoshi et al, 2012) and very young children (Perner and Esken, 2015;Wellman and Brandone, 2009).…”
Section: Posterior Superior Temporal Sulcusmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A recent extensive meta-analysis showed that tasks of theory of mind, which heavily rely on imagining or understanding movement in order to infer intentions, strongly recruit bilateral pSTS (Schurz et al, 2014). This form of inference has been called teleological reasoning (Gergely and Csibra, 2003;Perner and Roessler, 2012) and is also present in primates (Myowa-Yamakoshi et al, 2012) and very young children (Perner and Esken, 2015;Wellman and Brandone, 2009).…”
Section: Posterior Superior Temporal Sulcusmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such low-level mindreading (Frith and Frith, 1999;Perner and Esken, 2015;Wellman and Brandone, 2009) posits that, if an individual performs an action, then he or she must do so with the purpose of achieving a goal (i.e. means-end reasoning).…”
Section: Posterior Superior Temporal Sulcusmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specifically, following sensory processing, we deduce the individual appraisals behind each pattern of facial muscle movements, body postures, or vocal prosody, and subsequently infer the emotion experienced by another individual. In this view, we should observe brain regions involved in “mindreading” (i.e., the process of inferring others' thoughts, beliefs, and desires) across all perceptual decisions on emotions (e.g., Frith & Frith, ; Perner & Esken, ). We found support for the strong version of appraisal theory in our nonverbal paradigm of emotion perception, that is, emotion matching, but not during emotion labeling or emotion discrimination.…”
Section: Conclusion Implications and Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While Zelazo focuses on the developmental evolutions that could yield domain-general changes, Perner and Esken (2015) address the question of the mechanisms that allow individuals to make sense of their environment -what Carey et al (2015) identified with the constructivist part of Piaget's enterprise -in one of the two domains they analyzed, namely theory of mind. One of the main assumptions of the theory-theory approach favored by Carey and her collaborators is that conceptual development mainly affects a small set of framework theories among which the theory of mind is of paramount importance as it allows humans to understand others and their actions.…”
Section: Understanding Others Mentalism and Teleologymentioning
confidence: 99%