Department of Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322, United States.
Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, United States.
Cognition. 2017 Nov;168:146-153. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.06.027. Epub 2017 Jul 3.
Prior work suggests that our understanding of how things work ("intuitive physics") and how people work ("intuitive psychology") are distinct domains of human cognition. Here we directly test the dissociability of these two domains by investigating knowledge of intuitive physics and intuitive psychology in adults with Williams syndrome (WS) - a genetic developmental disorder characterized by severely impaired spatial cognition, but relatively spared social cognition. WS adults and mental-age matched (MA) controls completed an intuitive physics task and an intuitive psychology task. If intuitive physics is a distinct domain (from intuitive psychology), then we should observe differential impairment on the physics task for individuals with WS compared to MA controls. Indeed, adults with WS performed significantly worse on the intuitive physics than the intuitive psychology task, relative to controls. These results support the hypothesis that knowledge of the physical world can be disrupted independently from knowledge of the social world.
先前的研究表明,我们对于事物运作方式的理解(“直观物理学”)和人们运作方式的理解(“直观心理学”)是人类认知的两个不同领域。在这里,我们通过研究患有威廉姆斯综合征(WS)的成年人的直观物理学和直观心理学知识来直接测试这两个领域的可分离性。WS 是一种以严重空间认知障碍为特征、但社会认知相对保留的遗传性发育障碍。WS 成人和心理年龄匹配(MA)对照组完成了直观物理学任务和直观心理学任务。如果直观物理学是一个独特的领域(与直观心理学不同),那么我们应该观察到 WS 个体相对于 MA 对照组在物理任务上的差异受损。事实上,与对照组相比,WS 成年人在直观物理学任务上的表现明显差于直观心理学任务。这些结果支持了这样一种假设,即对物理世界的知识可以与对社会世界的知识独立受损。