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Qureshi, Adam W.; Apperly, Ian A.; Samson, Dana – Cognition, 2010
Previous research suggests that perspective-taking and other "theory of mind" processes may be cognitively demanding for adult participants, and may be disrupted by concurrent performance of a secondary task. In the current study, a Level-1 visual perspective task was administered to 32 adults using a dual-task paradigm in which the secondary task…
Descriptors: Computation, Cognitive Development, Adults, Theory of Mind
Wertz, Annie E.; German, Tamsin C. – Cognition, 2007
The mechanisms underwriting our commonsense psychology, or "theory of mind", have been extensively investigated via reasoning tasks that require participants to "predict" the action of agents based on information about beliefs and desires. However, relatively few studies have investigated the processes contributing to a central component of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Beliefs, Adults, Cognitive Processes
Skolnick, Deena; Bloom, Paul – Cognition, 2006
Young children reliably distinguish reality from fantasy; they know that their friends are real and that Batman is not. But it is an open question whether they appreciate, as adults do, that there are multiple fantasy worlds. We test this by asking children and adults about fictional characters' beliefs about other characters who exist either…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Young Children, Adults, Fantasy

Clark, Eve V. – Cognition, 1997
Compares the many-perspectives account of lexical acquisition--which proposes that children learn to take alternative perspectives along with the words they acquire--to the one-perspective account--which proposes that children are at first able to use only one term to talk about an object or event. Provides evidence from a variety of sources that…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Language Acquisition