Colombo Marea S, Bremer Charlotte, Gross Julien, Halberstadt Jamin, Hayne Harlene
Department of Psychology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Eur J Psychol. 2020 May 29;16(2):300-316. doi: 10.5964/ejop.v16i2.1998. eCollection 2020 May.
Despite considerable interest in the development of Theory of Mind (ToM) during early childhood, until recently, there has been little consideration about whether and how ToM skills continue to change into adulthood. Furthermore, the false-belief task, which is believed to capture the underlying mechanisms of ToM, is rarely used in studies of ToM with adults; those tasks that do assess false-belief understanding may be confounded by incidental task demands, such as complex narratives and excessive memory requirements, making it difficult to isolate adults' true ToM skills, much less to compare them with the skills of children. Here, we adapted a task developed by Valle, Massaro, Castelli, and Marchetti (2015, https://doi.org/10.5964/ejop.v11i1.829) to assess false-belief understanding in adults. Participants were randomly assigned to one of three conditions. In the reading condition, participants read a story about the unexpected transfer of a ball between three brothers. In the video condition, participants watched a video version of the same story. Finally, in the training condition, participants were first trained on the names of the characters, before watching the video. Although condition did not affect participants' ability to correctly answer a standard false belief question ("Where does X think Y thinks the ball is?"), participants in the training condition used more mental state language to justify their responses ("Why does X think Y thinks the ball is here?"), and this improved performance was mediated by improved memory for the story details. We conclude that at least some "failures" of ToM use may be due to an inability to understand, recall, or communicate complex information in a ToM task, raising important questions about how best to measure ToM in adults (and children) in the future.
尽管幼儿期心理理论(ToM)的发展备受关注,但直到最近,对于ToM技能是否以及如何持续发展到成年期,人们几乎没有进行过思考。此外,被认为能够捕捉ToM潜在机制的错误信念任务,在针对成年人的ToM研究中很少被使用;那些确实评估错误信念理解的任务可能会受到附带任务要求的干扰,比如复杂的叙述和过高的记忆要求,这使得难以分离出成年人真正的ToM技能,更不用说将它们与儿童的技能进行比较了。在此,我们改编了由瓦莱、马萨罗、卡斯泰利和马尔凯蒂(2015年,https://doi.org/10.5964/ejop.v11i1.829)开发的一项任务,以评估成年人对错误信念的理解。参与者被随机分配到三种条件之一。在阅读条件下,参与者阅读一个关于一个球在三兄弟之间意外转移的故事。在视频条件下,参与者观看同一故事的视频版本。最后,在训练条件下,参与者在观看视频之前先接受角色名字的训练。尽管条件并未影响参与者正确回答标准错误信念问题(“X认为Y认为球在哪里?”)的能力,但训练条件下的参与者使用了更多的心理状态语言来为他们的回答辩护(“为什么X认为Y认为球在这里?”),并且这种表现的提高是由对故事细节记忆的改善所介导的。我们得出结论,ToM使用中的至少一些“失败”可能是由于在ToM任务中无法理解、回忆或传达复杂信息,这就引出了关于未来如何最好地测量成年人(以及儿童)的ToM的重要问题。