Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5039957 Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 2017 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Five novel tasks were crafted to assess theory-of-mind skills in the auditory realm.•Theory-of-mind skills were significantly affected by age and gender, but not modality.•Our auditory tasks represent a scalable set of emerging theory-of-mind skills.

Theory of mind (ToM) gradually develops during the preschool years. Measures of ToM usually target visual experience, but auditory experiences also provide valuable social information. Given differences between the visual and auditory modalities (e.g., sights persist, sounds fade) and the important role environmental input plays in social-cognitive development, we asked whether modality might influence the progression of ToM development. The current study expands Wellman and Liu's ToM scale (2004) by testing 66 preschoolers using five standard visual ToM tasks and five newly crafted auditory ToM tasks. Age and gender effects were found, with 4- and 5-year-olds demonstrating greater ToM abilities than 3-year-olds and girls passing more tasks than boys; there was no significant effect of modality. Both visual and auditory tasks formed a scalable set. These results indicate that there is considerable consistency in when children are able to use visual and auditory inputs to reason about various aspects of others' mental states.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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