Evidence that altercentric biases in a continuous false belief task depend on highlighting the agent's belief

被引:1
作者
Speiger, Marie Luise [1 ]
Rothmaler, Katrin [1 ]
Liszkowski, Ulf [2 ]
Rakoczy, Hannes [3 ]
Wiesmann, Charlotte Grosse [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Max Planck Inst Human Cognit & Brain Sci, Minerva Fast Track Grp Milestones Early Cognit Dev, Stephanstr 1A, D-04103 Leipzig, Saxony, Germany
[2] Univ Hamburg, Dept Dev Psychol, Von Melle Pk 5, D-20146 Hamburg, Germany
[3] Georg August Univ Gottingen, Dept Dev Psychol, Waldweg 26, D-37073 Gottingen, Germany
[4] Univ Technol Nuremberg, Dept Liberal Arts & Sci, Ulmenstr 52i, D-90443 Nurnberg, Germany
关键词
Implicit/explicit theory of mind; False belief; Altercentric bias; Egocentric bias; Automatic belief processing; Spontaneous mentalizing; Sandbox task; PERSPECTIVE-TAKING; OTHERS BELIEFS; MIND; INFANTS; KNOWLEDGE; COGNITION; ADULTS;
D O I
10.1016/j.cognition.2024.106055
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
As social beings, we excel at understanding what other people think or believe. We even seem to be influenced by the belief of others in situations where it is irrelevant to our current tasks. Such altercentric interference has been proposed to reflect implicit belief processing. However, in which situations altercentric interference occurs and to what extent it is automatic or dependent on the relevance of the belief in context are open questions. To investigate this, we developed a novel task testing whether participants show an altercentric bias when searching for an object in a continuous search space (a 'sandbox'). Critically, another agent is present that holds either a true or a false belief about the object location, depending on condition. We predicted that participants' search for the object would deviate from its actual location in direction of where the agent believed the object to be. Further, we tested how this altercentric bias would interact with an explicit belief reasoning version of the task, where participants are asked where the agent would look for the object. In two large, preregistered studies (N = 113 and N = 157), we found evidence for an altercentric bias in participants' object search. Importantly, this bias was only present in participants who conducted the explicit before the implicit task and started the experiment with the false belief condition. These findings indicate that altercentric biases depend on the relevance of the other's belief in the context of the task, suggesting that spontaneous belief processing is not automatic but context dependent.
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页数:17
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