Adults possess a rich set of conceptions about the internal cognitions and mental states of themselves and others. These conceptions constitute a naive theory of mind and as such are crucial to a mature understanding of self and others. But what, if anything, do young children know about the mind? During the current grant period I have elaborated a theory of children's developing understanding of the mind. This theory sketches the nature of our everyday adult theory of mind, and proposes several phases in the development of this basic understanding. Consideration of this domain of understanding and of this developmental theory raises several questions. One concerns how children's understanding of persons fits with, yet differentiates from, their understanding of physical objects or of plants and animals--how naive psychology developmentally relates to naive physics and naive biology. A second concerns how understandings of different mental states--e.g., beliefs versus desires versus emotions versus percepts--relate to one another developmentally in the child's larger understanding of persons. A third concerns issues of ecological validity and conceptual importance--whether a mentalistic understanding of persons is indeed common and basic to person conception and social understanding or rather rare and elicited only in contrived laboratory tasks? A fourth concerns the nature and timing of developmental transitions in this domain. Relatedly, a fifth question concerns clarifying the research findings on this topic. As relevant research has quickly accumulated over the last few years it has become increasingly inconsistent--an initial set of findings replicated across several different laboratories, countries,m and tasks have yielded to an array of, at times, contradictory findings and quite divergent theoretical interpretations. I propose a variety of interrelated studies to address these five questions: research relating children's psychological understanding to their physical and biological reasoning; research encompassing and relating children's understanding of persons' thoughts, desires, emotions, and perceptions; research coupling laboratory methods with more observational natural language findings; a meta-analysis to clarify the nature of extant findings across many individual studies; and several multi-measure investigations designed to more firmly assess developmental patterns, sequences, and correlates of children's understanding of mind.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01HD022149-08A1
Application #
2198461
Study Section
Human Development and Aging Subcommittee 3 (HUD)
Project Start
1987-05-01
Project End
1999-04-30
Budget Start
1995-05-01
Budget End
1996-04-30
Support Year
8
Fiscal Year
1995
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Department
Type
Organized Research Units
DUNS #
791277940
City
Ann Arbor
State
MI
Country
United States
Zip Code
48109
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O'Reilly, Karin; Peterson, Candida C; Wellman, Henry M (2014) Sarcasm and advanced theory of mind understanding in children and adults with prelingual deafness. Dev Psychol 50:1862-77
Dunphy-Lelii, Sarah; Labounty, Jennifer; Lane, Jonathan D et al. (2014) The Social Context of Infant Intention Understanding. J Cogn Dev 15:60-77
Lane, Jonathan D; Harris, Paul L; Gelman, Susan A et al. (2014) More than meets the eye: young children's trust in claims that defy their perceptions. Dev Psychol 50:865-71
Brandone, Amanda C; Horwitz, Suzanne R; Aslin, Richard N et al. (2014) Infants' goal anticipation during failed and successful reaching actions. Dev Sci 17:23-34
Lane, Jonathan D; Wellman, Henry M; Evans, E Margaret (2014) Approaching an understanding of omniscience from the preschool years to early adulthood. Dev Psychol 50:2380-92

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