Why Do Young Children Look so Smart and Older Children Look so Dumb on True Belief Control Tasks? An Investigation of Pragmatic Performance Factors
Why Do Young Children Look so Smart and Older Children Look so Dumb on True Belief Control Tasks? An Investigation of Pragmatic Performance FactorsWhen do children acquire a meta-representational Theory of Mind? False Belief (FB) tasks have become the litmus test to answer this question. In such tasks, subjects must ascribe a non-veridical belief to another agent and predict/explain her actions accordingly. Empirically, children pass explicit verbal versions of FB tasks from around age 4. The standard interpretation of this finding is that children at this age have acquired a solid capacity for meta-representation. New research with true belief (TB) control tasks, however, presents a puzzling phenomenon: While 3-year-olds pass these tasks but fail FB tasks, children from age 4 begin to show the reverse performance (passing FB but failing TB). Competence deficit accounts claim that these findings jeopardize the standard interpretation; they show that children may use simple heuristics rather than true meta-representation and that the original FB findings may thus have been false positives. Pragmatic performance limitation accounts, in contrast, claim that these findings do not document any conceptual limitations, but merely reflect children’s confusion in light of the task pragmatics. In the present study, the two accounts were tested against each other in seven experiments with 4- to 7-yearold children. Pragmatic tasks factors of TB tests were systematically modified. Results show that children’s difficulty with TB tasks indeed disappeared after some such modifications. This clearly speaks against competence limitation accounts and corroborates the standard interpretation of FB and related Theory of Mind tasks.https://www.psych.uni-goettingen.de/de/development/publications_department/articlereference-2020-02-05-0698161670https://www.psych.uni-goettingen.de/@@site-logo/university-of-goettingen-logo.svg
Hannes Rakoczy and Nese Oktay-Gür
Why Do Young Children Look so Smart and Older Children Look so Dumb on True Belief Control Tasks? An Investigation of Pragmatic Performance Factors
Journal of Cognition and Development
When do children acquire a meta-representational Theory of Mind?
False Belief (FB) tasks have become the litmus test to answer this
question. In such tasks, subjects must ascribe a non-veridical belief to
another agent and predict/explain her actions accordingly. Empirically,
children pass explicit verbal versions of FB tasks from around age 4. The
standard interpretation of this finding is that children at this age have
acquired a solid capacity for meta-representation. New research with
true belief (TB) control tasks, however, presents a puzzling phenomenon: While 3-year-olds pass these tasks but fail FB tasks, children from
age 4 begin to show the reverse performance (passing FB but failing TB).
Competence deficit accounts claim that these findings jeopardize the
standard interpretation; they show that children may use simple heuristics rather than true meta-representation and that the original FB
findings may thus have been false positives. Pragmatic performance
limitation accounts, in contrast, claim that these findings do not document any conceptual limitations, but merely reflect children’s confusion
in light of the task pragmatics. In the present study, the two accounts
were tested against each other in seven experiments with 4- to 7-yearold children. Pragmatic tasks factors of TB tests were systematically
modified. Results show that children’s difficulty with TB tasks indeed
disappeared after some such modifications. This clearly speaks against
competence limitation accounts and corroborates the standard interpretation of FB and related Theory of Mind tasks.