The claim behind """"""""theory of mind"""""""" is that certain core conceptions organize and enable our everyday understanding of the social world. In particular, social cognition is based on thinking of people in terms of their mental states--their beliefs, desires, hopes, goals, and inner feelings. This everyday assumption of mind is powerful and constraining. It leads us to try to use the mind and increase its powers, to share inner experiences, to distinguish between purely imaginary and real events, and to interact with other persons by searching for and reaching out to their underlying mentalities. A mentalistic construal of persons is fundamental not only to adults; some essential parts of it develop early in childhood. This raises intriguing questions: (1) When do children know what about basic mental-psychological states--beliefs, desires, emotions? (2) When and how do mental state understandings cohere into what sort of larger naive psychology? (3) When do children's mentalistic understandings become central to their everyday lives? (4) How are these conceptions developed and socio-culturally transmitted; what factors shape understanding; to what extent is a mentalistic construal of persons widespread across cultures vs. limited to our society? I propose 12 interrelated investigations to address these questions. The investigations include meta-analytic, laboratory, and conversational studies that build on and advance my recent related research. The studies focus especially on: children's explanations for and coherent mental state understandings of persons; the processes of change, including parent-child interchanges, that shape children's developing conception; the preschool years--a period of crucial change and transition for """"""""theory of mind"""""""" understandings--with the inclusion of 2-year- olds who bridge the gap from infancy to early childhood.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HD022149-13
Application #
6387519
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-BBBP-4 (01))
Program Officer
Feerick, Margaret M
Project Start
1987-05-01
Project End
2004-04-30
Budget Start
2001-05-01
Budget End
2002-04-30
Support Year
13
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
$169,279
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
Brandone, Amanda C (2015) Infants' social and motor experience and the emerging understanding of intentional actions. Dev Psychol 51:512-23
Brink, Kimberly A; Lane, Jonathan D; Wellman, Henry M (2015) Developmental pathways for social understanding: linking social cognition to social contexts. Front Psychol 6:719
Ding, Xiao Pan; Wellman, Henry M; Wang, Yu et al. (2015) Theory-of-Mind Training Causes Honest Young Children to Lie. Psychol Sci 26:1812-21
Rhodes, Marjorie; Hetherington, Chelsea; Brink, Kimberly et al. (2015) Infants' use of social partnerships to predict behavior. Dev Sci 18:909-16
Bowman, Lindsay C; Kovelman, Ioulia; Hu, Xiaosu et al. (2015) Children's belief- and desire-reasoning in the temporoparietal junction: evidence for specialization from functional near-infrared spectroscopy. Front Hum Neurosci 9:560
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

Showing the most recent 10 out of 56 publications