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Action Anticipation Through Attribution of False Belief by 2-Year-Olds
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Citations
37
References
2007
Year
Cognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesCognitive DevelopmentSocial ReasoningCognitionSocial SciencesBehavioral IssueHuman CognitionCognitive PsychologyFalse BeliefsFalse BeliefExperimental PsychologyAction AnticipationComputer MonitorSocial CognitionPsychologyChild DevelopmentDevelopmental Psychology
Two-year-olds engage in many behaviors that ostensibly require the attribution of mental states to other individuals. Yet the overwhelming consensus has been that children of this age are unable to attribute false beliefs. In the current study, we used an eyetracker to record infants' looking behavior while they watched actions on a computer monitor. Our data demonstrate that 25-month-old infants correctly anticipate an actor's actions when these actions can be predicted only by attributing a false belief to the actor.
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