Abstract
We examined the development of children's understanding of beliefs and emotions in relation to parental talk about the psychological world. We considered the relations between parent–child talk about the emotions of characters depicted in a picture book, false belief understanding and emotion understanding. Seventy-eight primarily Caucasian and middle-class parents and their 3- to 5-year-old children participated (half boys and half girls). The emotions talked about were relatively simple, but the complexity of the situation varied in terms of whether or not an understanding of beliefs was required to understand the emotion. Talk about the belief-dependent aspects of the emotions of picture book characters predicted children's false belief understanding, whereas talk about non-belief-dependent aspects of these emotions predicted children's emotion understanding. We argue that these data suggest that the development of children's understanding of beliefs and emotions is intertwined with learning to talk about the psychological world.
Acknowledgments
This study was supported by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) doctoral fellowship and a Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research/British Columbia Medical Services Foundation Trainee Award (Population Health) to the first author and by SSHRC Standard Research Grants 410–1999–0476 and 410–2002–1416 awarded to the second and third authors.
We thank Sherrie Atwood, Sharon Baxter, Harkirat Kaur, Andrea Lee, Liana Pegura and Laura Stevens for transcribing and coding the parent–child talk.