Early false-belief understanding in traditional non-Western societies

H. Clark Barrett(University of California, Los Angeles), Tanya Broesch(Simon Fraser University), Rose M. Scott(University of California, Merced), Zijing He(Sun Yat-sen University), Renée Baillargeon(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Di Wu(Cedarville University), Matthias Bolz(Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences), Joseph Henrich(University of British Columbia), Peipei Setoh(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Jianxin Wang(Lanzhou University), Stephen Laurence(University of Sheffield)
Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences
January 30, 2013
Cited by 163Open Access
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Abstract

The psychological capacity to recognize that others may hold and act on false beliefs has been proposed to reflect an evolved, species-typical adaptation for social reasoning in humans; however, controversy surrounds the developmental timing and universality of this trait. Cross-cultural studies using elicited-response tasks indicate that the age at which children begin to understand false beliefs ranges from 4 to 7 years across societies, whereas studies using spontaneous-response tasks with Western children indicate that false-belief understanding emerges much earlier, consistent with the hypothesis that false-belief understanding is a psychological adaptation that is universally present in early childhood. To evaluate this hypothesis, we used three spontaneous-response tasks that have revealed early false-belief understanding in the West to test young children in three traditional, non-Western societies: Salar (China), Shuar/Colono (Ecuador) and Yasawan (Fiji). Results were comparable with those from the West, supporting the hypothesis that false-belief understanding reflects an adaptation that is universally present early in development.


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