2016
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01721
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Rethinking the Relationship between Social Experience and False-Belief Understanding: A Mentalistic Account

Abstract: It was long assumed that the capacity to represent false beliefs did not emerge until at least age four, as evidenced by children’s performance on elicited-response tasks. However, recent evidence that infants appear to demonstrate false-belief understanding when tested with alternative, non-elicited-response measures has led some researchers to conclude that the capacity to represent beliefs emerges in the 1st year of life. This mentalistic view has been criticized for failing to offer an explanation for the … Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 86 publications
(120 reference statements)
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“…Furthermore, it is critical not to conflate the absence of expression with the absence of capacity. Roby and Scott () suggest that social influences may facilitate the use of ToM more than they enable its emergence. In Vanuatu, such influences may significantly impact the use and performance of ToM far beyond the accepted onset at 4–5 years of age.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, it is critical not to conflate the absence of expression with the absence of capacity. Roby and Scott () suggest that social influences may facilitate the use of ToM more than they enable its emergence. In Vanuatu, such influences may significantly impact the use and performance of ToM far beyond the accepted onset at 4–5 years of age.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Multiple extraneous factors can contribute to failure in both traditional and nontraditional tasks [71,96]. In a recent nontraditional preferential-looking task, for example, 3-year-olds with low verbal ability failed (i.e., were below chance in looking preferentially at the correct picture) when the false-belief narrative was made linguistically ambiguous [71].…”
Section: Pragmatic Accounts In Pragmatic Accounts Children Correctlmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…ToM as a social construct is inevitably shaped by social input (Hughes & Devine, 2015). The use of the ability to represent beliefs is influenced by social experiences too (Roby & Scott, 2016). Having siblings augments the quantity and intensity of the social interaction within the family, which in turn provides ideal circumstances for children’s social development (Hughes & Devine, 2015).…”
Section: Practical Jokingmentioning
confidence: 99%