Early false-belief understanding in traditional non-Western societies

Author:

Barrett H. Clark1,Broesch Tanya2,Scott Rose M.3,He Zijing4,Baillargeon Renée5,Wu Di6,Bolz Matthias7,Henrich Joseph8,Setoh Peipei5,Wang Jianxin9,Laurence Stephen10

Affiliation:

1. UCLA Department of Anthropology, 341 Haines Hall Box 951552, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA

2. Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5A 1S6

3. School of Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts, University of California Merced, 5200 North Lake Road, Merced, CA 95343, USA

4. Department of Psychology, Sun Yat-sen University, 135 Xingangxi Road, Guangzhou, Guangdong 510275, People's Republic of China

5. Department of Psychology, University of Illinois, 603 East Daniel Street, Champaign, IL 61820, USA

6. Psychology Department, Cedarville University, 251 N. Main St., Cedarville, OH 45314, USA

7. Department of Social Neuroscience, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, 04103 Leipzig, Germany

8. Departments of Psychology and Economics, University of British Columbia, 2136 West Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z4

9. Center for Studies of Ethnic Minorities in Northwest China, Lanzhou University, 9 Jiayuguan West Road, Lanzhou 730020, People's Republic of China

10. Department of Philosophy, University of Sheffield, 45 Victoria Street, Sheffield, S3 7QB, UK

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.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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