Drawing insight from pictures: The development of concepts of false drawing and false belief in children with deafness, normal hearing, and autism
Contribuinte(s) |
Briston, R. |
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Data(s) |
01/01/2002
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Resumo |
Theory-of-mind concepts in children with deafness, autism, and normal development (N = 154) were examined in three experiments using a set of standard inferential false-belief tasks and matched sets of tasks involving false drawings. Results of all three experiments replicated previously published findings by showing that primary school children with deafness or autism, aged 6 to 13 years, scored significantly lower than normal-developing 4-year-old preschoolers on standard misleading-container and unseen-change tests of false-belief understanding. Furthermore, deaf and autistic children generally scored higher on drawing-based tests than on corresponding standard tests and, on the most challenging of the false-drawing tests in Experiment 2, they significantly outperformed the normal-developing preschoolers by clearly understanding their own false intentions and another person's false beliefs about an actively misleading drawing. In Experiment 3, preschoolers; outperformed older deaf and autistic children on standard tasks, but did less well on a task that required the drawing of a false belief. Methodological factors could not fully explain the findings, but early social and conversational experiences in the family were deemed likely contributors. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Blackwell |
Palavras-Chave | #Psychology, Educational #Psychology, Developmental #Mental States #Mind #Perspective #3-year-olds #Performance #Individuals #Intention #Language #C1 #380106 Developmental Psychology and Ageing #780108 Behavioural and cognitive sciences #750312 Youth/child development and welfare |
Tipo |
Journal Article |