Altercentric Interference in Level 1 Visual Perspective Taking Reflects the Ascription of Mental States, Not Submentalizing

被引:110
作者
Furlanetto, Tiziano [1 ]
Becchio, Cristina [2 ,3 ]
Samson, Dana [4 ]
Apperly, Ian [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Turin, Dept Psychol, Ctr Cognit Sci, I-10124 Turin, Italy
[2] Univ Turin, Dept Psychol, Dept Robot Brain & Cognit Sci, I-10124 Turin, Italy
[3] Fdn Ist Italiano Tecnol, Dept Robot Brain & Cognit Sci, Genoa, Italy
[4] Catholic Univ Louvain, Psychol Sci Res Inst, Louvain, Belgium
[5] Univ Birmingham, Sch Psychol, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England
关键词
visual perspective taking; implicit mentalizing; submentalizing; altercentric interferences; IMPLICIT THEORY; EYE-GAZE; MIND; ATTRIBUTION; BELIEFS; OTHERS; EGOCENTRISM; PERCEPTION; CHILDREN;
D O I
10.1037/xhp0000138
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
A growing body of work suggests that in some circumstances, humans may be capable of ascribing mental states to others in a way that is fast, cognitively efficient, and implicit (implicit mentalizing hypothesis). However, the interpretation of this work has recently been challenged by suggesting that the observed effects may reflect "submentalizing" effects of attention and memory, with no ascription of mental states (submentalizing hypothesis). The present study employed a strong test between these hypotheses by examining whether apparently automatic processing of another's visual perspective is influenced by experience-dependent beliefs about whether that person can see. Altercentric interference was observed when participants judged their own perspective on stimuli involving an avatar wearing goggles that participants believed to be transparent but not when they believed the goggles to be opaque. These results are consistent with participants ascribing mental states to the avatar and not with the submentalizing hypothesis that altercentric interference arises merely because avatars cue shifts in spatial attention.
引用
收藏
页码:158 / 163
页数:6
相关论文
共 31 条
[1]   World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki Ethical Principles for Medical Research Involving Human Subjects [J].
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2013, 310 (20) :2191-2194
[2]  
Apperly I, 2011, MINDREADERS: THE COGNITIVE BASIS OF THEORY OF MIND, P1
[3]   Do Humans Have Two Systems to Track Beliefs and Belief-Like States? [J].
Apperly, Ian A. ;
Butterfill, Stephen A. .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 2009, 116 (04) :953-970
[4]   False-belief understanding in infants [J].
Baillargeon, Rene ;
Scott, Rose M. ;
He, Zijing .
TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES, 2010, 14 (03) :110-118
[5]   Movement and mind:: A functional imaging study of perception and interpretation of complex intentional movement patterns [J].
Castelli, F ;
Happé, F ;
Frith, U ;
Frith, C .
NEUROIMAGE, 2000, 12 (03) :314-325
[6]   IMPLICIT UNDERSTANDING OF BELIEF [J].
CLEMENTS, WA ;
PERNER, J .
COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT, 1994, 9 (04) :377-395
[7]   Representational and executive selection resources in 'theory of mind': Evidence from compromised belief-desire reasoning in old age [J].
German, Tim P. ;
Hehman, Jessica A. .
COGNITION, 2006, 101 (01) :129-152
[8]   Submentalizing I Am Not Really Reading Your Mind [J].
Heyes, Cecilia .
PERSPECTIVES ON PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2014, 9 (02) :131-143
[9]   Animated triangles: An eye tracking investigation [J].
Klein, Annette M. ;
Zwickel, Jan ;
Prinz, Wolfgang ;
Frith, Uta .
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2009, 62 (06) :1189-1197
[10]   The Social Sense: Susceptibility to Others' Beliefs in Human Infants and Adults [J].
Kovacs, Agnes Melinda ;
Teglas, Erno ;
Endress, Ansgar Denis .
SCIENCE, 2010, 330 (6012) :1830-1834