Understanding children's and adults' limitations in mental state reasoning
- PMID: 15165550
- DOI: 10.1016/j.tics.2004.04.011
Understanding children's and adults' limitations in mental state reasoning
Abstract
Young children exhibit several deficits in reasoning about their own and other people's mental states. We propose that these deficits, along with more subtle limitations in adults' social-cognitive reasoning, are all manifestations of the same cognitive bias. This is the 'curse of knowledge' - a tendency to be biased by one's own knowledge when attempting to appreciate a more naïve or uninformed perspective. We suggest the developmental differences in mental state reasoning exist because the strength of this bias diminishes with age, not because of a conceptual change in how young children understand mental states. By pointing out the common denominator in children's and adults' limitations in mental state reasoning we hope to provide a unified framework for understanding the nature and development of social cognition.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
