表征心理理论发展中的知觉获取推理。

IF 9.4 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development Pub Date : 2021-09-01 DOI:10.1111/mono.12432
William V Fabricius, Christopher R Gonzales, Annelise Pesch, Amy A Weimer, John Pugliese, Kathleen Carroll, Rebecca R Bolnick, Anne S Kupfer, Nancy Eisenberg, Tracy L Spinrad
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引用次数: 10

摘要

儿童社会和认知发展的一个重要组成部分是他们理解人是具有内在心理状态的心理存在,包括欲望、意图、感知和信仰。要充分理解人作为心理存在,就需要一个表征心理理论(ToM),这是一种理解,即心理状态可以忠实地代表现实,也可以歪曲现实。在过去的35年里,研究人员一直依靠错误信念任务作为黄金标准来测试儿童对信念可以歪曲现实的理解。在错误信念任务中,孩子们被要求对对情境有错误信念的行动者的行为进行推理。尽管大量证据表明,大多数孩子在学龄前结束时通过了错误信念任务,但我们在这本专著中提出的证据表明,大多数孩子直到童年中期才理解错误信念,甚至不理解正确信念。我们认为幼儿在不理解错误信念的情况下通过知觉获取推理(PAR)完成错误信念任务。有了PAR,孩子们明白,看到会导致当下的认识,但不知道认识也会从思考中产生,或者在情况发生变化后作为记忆和信念持续存在。同样的道理,PAR会导致孩子们在真实信念任务中失败。PAR理论可以解释表征性思维和相关任务的其他传统测试中的表现,并且可以解释已发现的与真信念和假信念表现相关或影响其表现的因素。该理论提供了一种新的实验室测量方法,我们称之为信念理解量表(BUS)。这个量表可以区分使用PAR的孩子和理解信仰的孩子。该量表提供了一种研究表征性ToM发展所需的方法。在这本专著中,我们报告了我们对PAR理论产生的预测进行测试的结果。研究结果表明,在假设儿童使用PAR的年龄段,PAR在思维推理方面具有明显的局限性。在第二章中,对已发表的真信念文献的二次分析显示,儿童在几种真信念任务中失败。第三章至第九章描述了2003年至2014年间从580名4-7岁儿童以及14名成年人的小样本中收集的多项研究的新经验数据。参与者是从亚利桑那州凤凰城大都会区招募的。所有的参与者都以英语为母语。这些儿童是从大学资助的、社区幼儿园和日托中心以及医院产科病房招募的。成年人是参与研究的部分完成课程要求的大学生。社会计量学数据只在第九章收集,并在那里作了全面报告。在第三章中,任务程序的微小改变会导致儿童在三选项错误信念任务中的表现发生巨大变化。在第四章中,我们报告了儿童理解无知与理解错误信念之间的发展滞后比以往研究报告的滞后更长。在第五章中,儿童无法区分有错误信念的行为者和没有信念的行为者。在第六章中,研究结果表明,儿童发现对真实信念的推理并不比对错误信念的推理更容易。在第七章中,当孩子们被要求在错误信念任务中证明自己的正确答案时,他们没有参考代理人的错误信念。同样,在第八章中,当孩子们被要求解释在错误信念任务中的行为时,他们并没有引用代理人的错误信念。在第九章中,使用PAR的儿童与理解信念的儿童在社会发展水平、抑制控制水平和幼儿园适应水平三个维度上存在差异。尽管这些发现需要复制和其他解释的额外研究,但本专著中报告的结果集合挑战了普遍的观点,即表征性汤姆在学龄前结束时已经就位。此外,研究结果的模式与PAR是代表性ToM的发展先驱的建议是一致的。目前的研究结果也对婴儿和幼儿表现出与汤姆相关的能力以及表征性汤姆是天生的说法提出了质疑。
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Perceptual Access Reasoning (PAR) in Developing a Representational Theory of Mind.

An important part of children's social and cognitive development is their understanding that people are psychological beings with internal, mental states including desire, intention, perception, and belief. A full understanding of people as psychological beings requires a representational theory of mind (ToM), which is an understanding that mental states can faithfully represent reality, or misrepresent reality. For the last 35 years, researchers have relied on false-belief tasks as the gold standard to test children's understanding that beliefs can misrepresent reality. In false-belief tasks, children are asked to reason about the behavior of agents who have false beliefs about situations. Although a large body of evidence indicates that most children pass false-belief tasks by the end of the preschool years, the evidence we present in this monograph suggests that most children do not understand false beliefs or, surprisingly, even true beliefs until middle childhood. We argue that young children pass false-belief tasks without understanding false beliefs by using perceptual access reasoning (PAR). With PAR, children understand that seeing leads to knowing in the moment, but not that knowing also arises from thinking or persists as memory and belief after the situation changes. By the same token, PAR leads children to fail true-belief tasks. PAR theory can account for performance on other traditional tests of representational ToM and related tasks, and can account for the factors that have been found to correlate with or affect both true- and false-belief performance. The theory provides a new laboratory measure which we label the belief understanding scale (BUS). This scale can distinguish between a child who is operating with PAR versus a child who is understanding beliefs. This scale provides a method needed to allow the study of the development of representational ToM. In this monograph, we report the outcome of the tests that we have conducted of predictions generated by PAR theory. The findings demonstrated signature PAR limitations in reasoning about the mind during the ages when children are hypothesized to be using PAR. In Chapter II, secondary analyses of the published true-belief literature revealed that children failed several types of true-belief tasks. Chapters III through IX describe new empirical data collected across multiple studies between 2003 and 2014 from 580 children aged 4-7 years, as well as from a small sample of 14 adults. Participants were recruited from the Phoenix, Arizona metropolitan area. All participants were native English-speakers. Children were recruited from university-sponsored and community preschools and daycare centers, and from hospital maternity wards. Adults were university students who participated to partially fulfill course requirements for research participation. Sociometric data were collected only in Chapter IX, and are fully reported there. In Chapter III, minor alterations in task procedures produced wide variations in children's performance in 3-option false-belief tasks. In Chapter IV, we report findings which show that the developmental lag between children's understanding ignorance and understanding false belief is longer than the lag reported in previous studies. In Chapter V, children did not distinguish between agents who have false beliefs versus agents who have no beliefs. In Chapter VI, findings showed that children found it no easier to reason about true beliefs than to reason about false beliefs. In Chapter VII, when children were asked to justify their correct answers in false-belief tasks, they did not reference agents' false beliefs. Similarly, in Chapter VIII, when children were asked to explain agents' actions in false-belief tasks, they did not reference agents' false beliefs. In Chapter IX, children who were identified as using PAR differed from children who understood beliefs along three dimensions-in levels of social development, inhibitory control, and kindergarten adjustment. Although the findings need replication and additional studies of alternative interpretations, the collection of results reported in this monograph challenges the prevailing view that representational ToM is in place by the end of the preschool years. Furthermore, the pattern of findings is consistent with the proposal that PAR is the developmental precursor of representational ToM. The current findings also raise questions about claims that infants and toddlers demonstrate ToM-related abilities, and that representational ToM is innate.

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期刊介绍: Since 1935, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development has been a platform for presenting in-depth research studies and significant findings in child development and related disciplines. Each issue features a single study or a collection of papers on a unified theme, often complemented by commentary and discussion. In alignment with all Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) publications, the Monographs facilitate the exchange of data, techniques, research methods, and conclusions among development specialists across diverse disciplines. Subscribing to the Monographs series also includes a full subscription (6 issues) to Child Development, the flagship journal of the SRCD, and Child Development Perspectives, the newest journal from the SRCD.
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