| Literature DB >> 26500527 |
Lindsay C Bowman1, Ioulia Kovelman2, Xiaosu Hu3, Henry M Wellman2.
Abstract
Behaviorally, children's explicit theory of mind (ToM) proceeds in a progression of mental-state understandings: developmentally, children demonstrate accurate explicit desire-reasoning before accurate explicit belief-reasoning. Given its robust and cross-cultural nature, we hypothesize this progression may be paced in part by maturation/specialization of the brain. Neuroimaging research demonstrates that the right temporoparietal junction (TPJ) becomes increasingly selective for ToM reasoning as children age, and as their ToM improves. But this research has narrowly focused on beliefs or on undifferentiated mental-states. A recent ERP study in children included a critical contrast to desire-reasoning, and demonstrated that right posterior potentials differentiated belief-reasoning from desire-reasoning. Taken together, the literature suggests that children's desire-belief progression may be paced by specialization of the right TPJ for belief-reasoning specifically, beyond desire-reasoning. In the present study, we tested this hypothesis directly by examining children's belief- and desire-reasoning using functional near-infrared spectroscopy in conjunction with structural magnetic resonance imaging to pinpoint brain activation in the right TPJ. Results showed greatest activation in the right TPJ for belief-reasoning, beyond desire-reasoning, and beyond non-mental reasoning (control). Findings replicate and critically extend prior ERP results, and provide clear evidence for a specific neural mechanism underlying children's progression from understanding desires to understanding beliefs.Entities:
Keywords: beliefs; child development; desires; developmental cognitive neuroscience; fNIRS; temporoparietal junction (TPJ); theory of mind (ToM)
Year: 2015 PMID: 26500527 PMCID: PMC4595792 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00560
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Paired-samples t-tests comparing children’s mean oxy-hemoglobin response in the three condition contrasts in left and right TPJ for group and individual ROI analyses.
| Comparison | RTPJ | LTPJ |
|---|---|---|
| Belief versus Desire | ||
| Belief versus Physical | ||
| Desire versus Physical | ||
| Belief versus Desire | ||
| Belief versus Physical | ||
| Desire versus Physical | ||