“…First, to the extent that cognitive capacities also figure in explanations in other subfields of psychology, Marr’s framework naturally extends to these domains. A few areas in which the approach has been fruitfully pursued include (a) social cognition, for instance, in social categorization ( Klapper et al, 2018 ), mentalizing or “theory of mind” ( Baker et al, 2009 ; Michael & MacLeod, 2018 ; Mitchell, 2006 ; Thagard & Kunda, 1998 ), causal attribution ( De Houwer & Moors, 2015 ), moral cognition ( Mikhail, 2008 ), signaling and communication ( Frank & Goodman, 2012 ; Moreno & Baggio, 2015 ), and social attachment ( Chumbley & Steinhoff, 2019 ); (b) cognitive development, for instance, in theory of mind ( Goodman et al, 2006 ), probabilistic and causal learning ( Bonawitz et al, 2014 ; Gopnik & Bonawitz, 2015 ), self-directed learning ( Gureckis & Markant, 2012 ), pragmatic communication ( Bohn & Frank, 2019 ), analogical processing ( Gentner, 1983 , 2010 ), and concept formation ( Carey, 2009 ; Kinzler & Spelke, 2007 ); and (c) cognitive evolution, for instance, in cognitive structures and architectures that aim to account for language, social cognition, reasoning and decision-making ( Barrett, 2005 ; Carruthers, 2006 ; Cosmides & Tooby, 1995 ; Fodor, 2000 ; Lieder & Griffiths, 2020 ; Marcus, 2006 ).…”