Theory of Mind

Cards (34)

  • What is a ‘Theory of Mind’?
    It is the ability to attribute mental states to ourselves and others.
  • How can we measure Theory of Mind?
    Through various psychological tests and assessments.
  • When does Theory of Mind develop?
    It develops during early childhood.
  • What influences Theory of Mind development?
    Various factors including culture, parenting, and family size.
  • What does the definition of Theory of Mind include?
    It includes the ability to attribute thoughts, beliefs, intentions, desires, and knowledge.
  • Why is the content of other minds considered unobservable?
    Because we use different strategies to understand them.
  • How can we track the beliefs of others?
    By considering their history and past actions.
  • What does taking the perspective of someone else involve?
    Seeing the situation from their point of view.
  • What are the core features of social cognition related to Theory of Mind?
    • Predict future actions and behaviors
    • Reason about past behavior
    • Communicate effectively with others
    • Feel empathy for another person’s situation
    • Deceive others and detect deception
    • Avoid offense
    • Gift purchasing
  • What is stated about Theory of Mind in non-human primates?
    They can assess the visual perspective of others.
  • How do non-human primates use their understanding of others' perspectives?
    To decide which food to compete for.
  • What behavior do Western Scrub-Jays exhibit related to Theory of Mind?
    They cache food and pilfer other’s caches.
  • What is controversial about Theory of Mind in animals?
    The extent to which perspective-taking abilities are fully developed in them.
  • What is a challenge in measuring Theory of Mind?
    Devising a test that is profound yet simple enough for young children.
  • According to Dennett, what do people hold that predicts their behavior?
    Beliefs
  • What is the relationship between true beliefs and behavior?
    True beliefs can predict behavior and vice versa.
  • What is required to answer a false belief question?
    You need to represent the belief separately from your own.
  • What is the Unexpected Transfer Test designed to assess?
    Children's understanding of false beliefs.
  • What did the findings of the Unexpected Transfer Test reveal about 3-year-olds?
    They fail the belief question.
  • What is the Deceptive Box Test used to assess?
    Children's understanding of false beliefs through deception tasks.
  • What distinguishes explicit tasks from implicit tasks in measuring Theory of Mind?
    Explicit tasks require children to report the contents of another mind, while implicit tasks do not.
  • What did the findings of the Unexpected Preference Test reveal about 18-month-olds?
    They could understand that the experimenter had a different preference.
  • What does actively trying to deceive another person imply?
    It implies an understanding of other minds.
  • What did the study by Lewis et al. (1989) find about 3-year-old children?
    They were told convincing lies about forbidden actions.
  • What is suggested about the development of Theory of Mind?
    It may involve a rapid conceptual shift around the age of four.
  • What do early studies suggest about children's acquisition of the concept of ‘belief’?
    Children rapidly acquire this concept around their 4th birthday.
  • What cognitive demands limit a young child’s ability to pass the Unexpected Transfer Test?
    The cognitive demands of the task itself.
  • What changes helped improve 3-year-olds' performance in the Unexpected Transfer Test?
    Having the protagonist just turn around and asking children to enact the search phrase.
  • What was the purpose of the Deceptive Box Test – Mailing Procedure?
    To assess children's understanding of what they believed was inside a box.
  • What did early theorists argue about the development of Theory of Mind?
    They argued for a radical conceptual change around age four.
  • What cultural factors influence Theory of Mind development?
    Cultural timing of development varies, but the rate is similar across cultures.
  • How does parenting influence Theory of Mind development?
    Parental distress and poor economic situations are associated with poorer performance.
  • How does family size influence Theory of Mind development?
    Children with more siblings are developmentally advantaged in passing false belief tests.
  • What is the summary of the factors influencing Theory of Mind development?
    • Culture affects timing but not the rate of development.
    • Parenting styles impact performance.
    • Family size influences cognitive advantages in understanding Theory of Mind.