Role of theory-of-mind in strategic sophistication and prosociality amongst children : an experimental study

Individuals go through numerous interactions daily and Binmore (2012) once impeccably captured human interactions in a statement - “A game is being played whenever people have anything to do with each other.” In the field of game theory, there have been a plethora of strategic games designed to mimi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lee, Pei Qi
Other Authors: Ho Moon-Ho Ringo
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140418
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-140418
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1404182020-05-28T14:37:28Z Role of theory-of-mind in strategic sophistication and prosociality amongst children : an experimental study Lee, Pei Qi Ho Moon-Ho Ringo Yohanes Eko Riyanto School of Social Sciences yeriyanto@ntu.edu.sg, homh@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology::Applied psychology Social sciences::Economic theory::Microeconomics Individuals go through numerous interactions daily and Binmore (2012) once impeccably captured human interactions in a statement - “A game is being played whenever people have anything to do with each other.” In the field of game theory, there have been a plethora of strategic games designed to mimic human interactions. In our current study, a simplified version of the race game (HIT) and level-k reasoning game (stickers game) were employed to measure individual’s abilities to put themselves in the shoes of others, and their abilities to infer how others will respond to their actions (decisions). Economists and game theorists coin this as “strategic thinking”. Dictator and ultimatum games were used to measure individuals’ degree of “altruism”. Individuals’ abilities to think strategically and care about others cannot be dissociated from their abilities to think from others’ points of view during social interactions. Psychologists relate this ability to Theory-of-Mind (ToM). This study thus aims to find out if ToM, Intelligence Quotient (IQ) and age are correlated with strategic thinking amongst children. Concurrently, we investigate if the same factors are correlated with altruism in children. 49 children were recruited to undergo several measures of the aforementioned constructs. Results from this study found that (1) there is a positive correlation between children’s IQ and ToM; (2) a positive correlation between children’s IQ/ age/ ToM and strategic thinking in HIT5 and stickers game; (3) a positive correlation between children’s first-order ToM/ IQ and altruism. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2020-05-28T14:37:28Z 2020-05-28T14:37:28Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140418 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology::Applied psychology
Social sciences::Economic theory::Microeconomics
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology::Applied psychology
Social sciences::Economic theory::Microeconomics
Lee, Pei Qi
Role of theory-of-mind in strategic sophistication and prosociality amongst children : an experimental study
description Individuals go through numerous interactions daily and Binmore (2012) once impeccably captured human interactions in a statement - “A game is being played whenever people have anything to do with each other.” In the field of game theory, there have been a plethora of strategic games designed to mimic human interactions. In our current study, a simplified version of the race game (HIT) and level-k reasoning game (stickers game) were employed to measure individual’s abilities to put themselves in the shoes of others, and their abilities to infer how others will respond to their actions (decisions). Economists and game theorists coin this as “strategic thinking”. Dictator and ultimatum games were used to measure individuals’ degree of “altruism”. Individuals’ abilities to think strategically and care about others cannot be dissociated from their abilities to think from others’ points of view during social interactions. Psychologists relate this ability to Theory-of-Mind (ToM). This study thus aims to find out if ToM, Intelligence Quotient (IQ) and age are correlated with strategic thinking amongst children. Concurrently, we investigate if the same factors are correlated with altruism in children. 49 children were recruited to undergo several measures of the aforementioned constructs. Results from this study found that (1) there is a positive correlation between children’s IQ and ToM; (2) a positive correlation between children’s IQ/ age/ ToM and strategic thinking in HIT5 and stickers game; (3) a positive correlation between children’s first-order ToM/ IQ and altruism.
author2 Ho Moon-Ho Ringo
author_facet Ho Moon-Ho Ringo
Lee, Pei Qi
format Final Year Project
author Lee, Pei Qi
author_sort Lee, Pei Qi
title Role of theory-of-mind in strategic sophistication and prosociality amongst children : an experimental study
title_short Role of theory-of-mind in strategic sophistication and prosociality amongst children : an experimental study
title_full Role of theory-of-mind in strategic sophistication and prosociality amongst children : an experimental study
title_fullStr Role of theory-of-mind in strategic sophistication and prosociality amongst children : an experimental study
title_full_unstemmed Role of theory-of-mind in strategic sophistication and prosociality amongst children : an experimental study
title_sort role of theory-of-mind in strategic sophistication and prosociality amongst children : an experimental study
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140418
_version_ 1681057785453740032