Literature DB >> 12741755

Children are cursed: an asymmetric bias in mental-state attribution.

Susan A J Birch1, Paul Bloom.   

Abstract

Young children have problems reasoning about false beliefs. We suggest that this is at least partially the result of the same curse of knowledge that has been observed in adults--a tendency to be biased by one's own knowledge when assessing the knowledge of a more naive person. We tested 3- to 5-year-old children in a knowledge-attribution task and found that young children exhibited a curse-of-knowledge bias to a greater extent than older children, a finding that is consistent with their greater difficulty with false-belief tasks. We also found that children's misattributions were asymmetric. They were limited to cases in which the children were more knowledgeable than the other person; misattributions did not occur when the children were more ignorant than the other person. This suggests that their difficulty is better characterized by the curse of knowledge than by more general egocentrism or rationality accounts.

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Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12741755     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9280.03436

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Sci        ISSN: 0956-7976


  22 in total

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10.  False-belief understanding i 2.5-year-olds: evidence for violation-of-expectation change-of-location and unexpected-contents tasks.

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