Synchrony in the onset of mental-state reasoning: Evidence from five cultures
Over the past 20 years, developmental psychologists have shown considerable interest in the onset of a theory of mind, typically marked by children's ability to pass false-belief tasks. In Western cultures, children pass such tasks around the age of 5 years, with variations of the tasks produci...
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th-cmuir.6653943832-624752018-09-11T09:28:35Z Synchrony in the onset of mental-state reasoning: Evidence from five cultures Tara Callaghan Philippe Rochat Angeline Lillard Mary Louise Claux Hal Odden Shoji Itakura Sombat Tapanya Saraswati Singh Psychology Over the past 20 years, developmental psychologists have shown considerable interest in the onset of a theory of mind, typically marked by children's ability to pass false-belief tasks. In Western cultures, children pass such tasks around the age of 5 years, with variations of the tasks producing small changes in the age at which they are passed. Knowing whether this age of transition is common across diverse cultures is important to understanding what causes this development. Cross-cultural studies have produced mixed findings, possibly because of varying methods used in different cultures. The present study used a single procedure to measure false-belief understanding in five cultures: Canada, India, Peru, Samoa, and Thailand. With a standardized procedure, we found synchrony in the onset of mentalistic reasoning, with children crossing the false-belief milestone at approximately 5 years of age in every culture studied. The meaning of this synchrony for the origins of mental-state understanding is discussed. Copyright © 2005 American Psychological Society. 2018-09-11T09:28:35Z 2018-09-11T09:28:35Z 2005-05-01 Journal 09567976 2-s2.0-19844368173 10.1111/j.0956-7976.2005.01544.x https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=19844368173&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/62475 |
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Psychology Tara Callaghan Philippe Rochat Angeline Lillard Mary Louise Claux Hal Odden Shoji Itakura Sombat Tapanya Saraswati Singh Synchrony in the onset of mental-state reasoning: Evidence from five cultures |
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Over the past 20 years, developmental psychologists have shown considerable interest in the onset of a theory of mind, typically marked by children's ability to pass false-belief tasks. In Western cultures, children pass such tasks around the age of 5 years, with variations of the tasks producing small changes in the age at which they are passed. Knowing whether this age of transition is common across diverse cultures is important to understanding what causes this development. Cross-cultural studies have produced mixed findings, possibly because of varying methods used in different cultures. The present study used a single procedure to measure false-belief understanding in five cultures: Canada, India, Peru, Samoa, and Thailand. With a standardized procedure, we found synchrony in the onset of mentalistic reasoning, with children crossing the false-belief milestone at approximately 5 years of age in every culture studied. The meaning of this synchrony for the origins of mental-state understanding is discussed. Copyright © 2005 American Psychological Society. |
format |
Journal |
author |
Tara Callaghan Philippe Rochat Angeline Lillard Mary Louise Claux Hal Odden Shoji Itakura Sombat Tapanya Saraswati Singh |
author_facet |
Tara Callaghan Philippe Rochat Angeline Lillard Mary Louise Claux Hal Odden Shoji Itakura Sombat Tapanya Saraswati Singh |
author_sort |
Tara Callaghan |
title |
Synchrony in the onset of mental-state reasoning: Evidence from five cultures |
title_short |
Synchrony in the onset of mental-state reasoning: Evidence from five cultures |
title_full |
Synchrony in the onset of mental-state reasoning: Evidence from five cultures |
title_fullStr |
Synchrony in the onset of mental-state reasoning: Evidence from five cultures |
title_full_unstemmed |
Synchrony in the onset of mental-state reasoning: Evidence from five cultures |
title_sort |
synchrony in the onset of mental-state reasoning: evidence from five cultures |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=19844368173&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/62475 |
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1681425813913731072 |