| Keyword search (4,164 papers available) | ![]() |
"expectation" Keyword-tagged Publications:
| Title | Authors | PubMed ID | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Context changes judgments of liking and predictability for melodies | Albury AW; Bianco R; Gold BP; Penhune VB; | 38034280 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 2 | Infants Generalize Beliefs Across Individuals. | Burnside K, Neumann C, Poulin-Dubois D | 33071864 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 3 | Cue-Evoked Dopamine Neuron Activity Helps Maintain but Does Not Encode Expected Value. | Mendoza JA, Lafferty CK, Yang AK, Britt JP | 31693885 CSBN |
| 4 | Infants attribute false beliefs to a toy crane | Burnside K; Severdija V; Poulin-Dubois D; | 31309631 CRDH |
| 5 | The Role of Sleep in Learning Placebo Effects. | Chouchou F, Dang-Vu TT, Rainville P, Lavigne G | 30146053 PERFORM |
| Title: | Infants attribute false beliefs to a toy crane | ||||
| Authors: | Burnside K, Severdija V, Poulin-Dubois D | ||||
| Link: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31309631/ | ||||
| DOI: | 10.1111/desc.12887 | ||||
| Publication: | Developmental science | ||||
| Keywords: | agency; false belief; infancy; theory of mind; violation-of-expectation; | ||||
| PMID: | 31309631 | Category: | Dev Sci | Date Added: | 2019-08-07 |
| Dept Affiliation: |
CRDH
1 Centre for Research in Human Development, Concordia University, Montréal, Canada. |
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Description: |
The mentalistic view of early theory of mind posits that infants possess a robust and sophisticated understanding of false belief that is masked by the demands of traditional explicit tasks. Much of the evidence supporting this mentalistic view comes from infants' looking time at events that violate their expectations about the beliefs of a human agent. We conducted a replication of the violation-of-expectation procedure, except that the human agent was replaced by an inanimate agent. Infants watched a toy crane repeatedly move toward a box containing an object. In the absence of the crane, the object changed location. When the crane returned, 16-month-old infants looked longer when it turned toward the object's new location, consistent with the attribution of a false belief to the crane. These results suggest that infants spontaneously attribute false beliefs to inanimate agents. A video abstract of this article can be viewed at https://youtu.be/qqEPPhd9FDo. |



