Literature DB >> 22429030

2.5-year-olds succeed at a verbal anticipatory-looking false-belief task.

Zijing He1, Matthias Bolz, Renée Baillargeon.   

Abstract

Recent research suggests that infants and toddlers succeed at a wide range of non-elicited-response false-belief tasks (i.e., tasks that do not require children to answer a direct question about a mistaken agent's likely behaviour). However, one exception to this generalization comes from verbal anticipatory-looking tasks, which have produced inconsistent findings with toddlers. One possible explanation for these findings is that toddlers succeed when they correctly interpret the prompt as a self-addressed utterance (making the task a non-elicited-response task), but fail when they mistakenly interpret the prompt as a direct question (making the task an elicited-response task). Here, 2.5-year-old toddlers were tested in a verbal anticipatory-looking task that was designed to help them interpret the anticipatory prompt as a self-addressed utterance: the experimenter looked at the ceiling, chin in hand, during and after the prompt. Children gave evidence of false-belief understanding in this task, but failed when the experimenter looked at the child during and after the prompt. These results reinforce claims of robust continuity in early false-belief reasoning and provide additional support for the distinction between non-elicited- and elicited-response false-belief tasks. Three accounts of the discrepant results obtained with these tasks - and of early false-belief understanding more generally - are discussed.
© 2011 The British Psychological Society.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22429030      PMCID: PMC3351383          DOI: 10.1111/j.2044-835X.2011.02070.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Dev Psychol        ISSN: 0261-510X


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