Literature DB >> 8706525

Young children's understanding of thought bubbles and of thoughts.

H M Wellman1, M Hollander, C A Schult.   

Abstract

In a series of 4 studies, we explored preschoolers' understanding of thought bubbles. Very few 3-year-olds or 4-year-olds we tested knew what a thought-bubble depiction was without instruction. But, if simply told that the thought bubble "shows what someone is thinking," the vast majority of 3-year-olds and 4-year-olds easily understood the devices as depicting thoughts generally and individual thought contents specifically. In total, these children used thought-bubble depictions to ascertain the contents of characters' thoughts in a variety of situations; appropriately distinguished such depictions from mere associated actions or objects; described thought bubbles in the language of mental states; judged that persons' thoughts in these depictions were subjective in the sense of person-specific (and hence 2 people can have different thoughts about the same state of affairs); and judged that thought-bubble thoughts (a) were representational in the sense of depicting or showing some other state of affairs, (b) were mental and thus showed intangible, private, internal thoughts unlike real pictures or photographs, and (c) can be false, that is, can depict a person's misrepresentation of some state of affairs. We discuss the implications of these findings for young children's understanding of thoughts and thought bubbles, for their learning and comprehension of pictorial conventions, and for the use of thought bubbles to assess children's early understanding of mind.

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Mesh:

Year:  1996        PMID: 8706525

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  5 in total

1.  Is There a Downside to Anticipating the Upside? Children's and Adults' Reasoning About How Prior Expectations Shape Future Emotions.

Authors:  Karen Hjortsvang Lara; Kristin Hansen Lagattuta; Hannah J Kramer
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2017-11-24

2.  Deafness, thought bubbles, and theory-of-mind development.

Authors:  Henry M Wellman; Candida C Peterson
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2013-04-01

3.  Understanding of thought bubbles as mental representations in children with autism: implications for theory of mind.

Authors:  Sharyn Kerr; Kevin Durkin
Journal:  J Autism Dev Disord       Date:  2004-12

4.  Love is hard to understand: the relationship between transitivity and caused events in the acquisition of emotion verbs.

Authors:  Joshua K Hartshorne; Amanda Pogue; Jesse Snedeker
Journal:  J Child Lang       Date:  2014-06-19

5.  Sequences of mind development in boys with autism spectrum disorder.

Authors:  Abbas Bakhshipour; Majid Mahmood Aliloo; Hassan Shahrokhi; Toraj Hashemi; Shahrokh Amiri; Leila Mehdizadeh Fanid; Neda Yadegari; Farzin Hagnazari
Journal:  ISRN Neurol       Date:  2012-12-04
  5 in total

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