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Original Articles

Precursors to a Theory of Mind in infancy: Perspectives for research on autism

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Pages 27-39 | Published online: 30 Sep 2010
 

Abstract

There is ample evidence for a conceptual deficit in normally developing 3-year-olds' and autistic children's understanding of the mind. Recent research using nonverbal tasks has challenged this view since even 15-month-old infants appear to base their action predictions on a representation of the agent's beliefs (Onishi & Baillargeon, Citation2005). Our own findings from looking-time experiments indicate, however, that 16-month-olds' action predictions depend on behavioural and situational cues, rather than on a person's access to information. Further research is reviewed that indicates that 14-month-olds understand what another person can and cannot see, and that 18-month-olds predict a person's action from what she previously saw, when supported by behavioural cues. These findings support a constructivist view of a gradual understanding of conditions for knowing during the second year. The relevance of such findings for research on autism is discussed.

Notes

1 The authors would like to acknowledge the collaboration of Carmen Krempel, who ran Experiment 2 for her Diploma thesis at the University of Würzburg.

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