Young children have problems reasoning about false be-liefs. We suggest that this is at least partially the result of the same curse of knowledge that has been observed in adults—a tendency to be biased by one’s own knowledge when assessing the knowledge of a more naive person. We tested 3- to 5-year-old children in a knowl-edge-attribution task and found that young children exhibited a curse-of-knowledge bias to a greater extent than older children, a finding that is consistent with their greater difficulty with false-belief tasks. We also found that children’s misattributions were asymmetric. They were limited to cases in which the children were more knowledgeable than the other person; misattributions did not occur when the children were...
Some children are prone to interpret others’ behavior as stemming from hostile intentions, even when...
Are incorrect judgments on false belief tasks better explained within the framework of a conceptual ...
Young children seem to overextend a 'seeing = knowing rule' so that they neglect to notice that peop...
Our ability to reason about the perspectives of others is associated with many positive life outcome...
ABSTRACT—The ability to reason about mental states is critical for predicting and interpreting peopl...
ABSTRACT—The ability to reason about mental states is critical for predicting and interpreting peopl...
The ability to judge what information other people are likely to know is vital to successful communi...
Communicating effectively involves reasoning about what others know. Yet ample research shows that o...
ABSTRACT—Assessing what other people know and believe is critical for accurately understanding human...
Young children exhibit several deficits in reasoning about their own and other people’s mental state...
ABSTRACT—Assessing what other people know and believe is critical for accurately understanding human...
This study investigated two different expressions of the so-called curse of knowledge in primary sch...
This study investigated two different expressions of the so-called curse of knowl- edge in primary s...
ABSTRACT—Biases in reasoning can provide insight into under-lying processing mechanisms. We demonstr...
Some children are prone to interpret others’ behavior as stemming from hostile intentions, even when...
Some children are prone to interpret others’ behavior as stemming from hostile intentions, even when...
Are incorrect judgments on false belief tasks better explained within the framework of a conceptual ...
Young children seem to overextend a 'seeing = knowing rule' so that they neglect to notice that peop...
Our ability to reason about the perspectives of others is associated with many positive life outcome...
ABSTRACT—The ability to reason about mental states is critical for predicting and interpreting peopl...
ABSTRACT—The ability to reason about mental states is critical for predicting and interpreting peopl...
The ability to judge what information other people are likely to know is vital to successful communi...
Communicating effectively involves reasoning about what others know. Yet ample research shows that o...
ABSTRACT—Assessing what other people know and believe is critical for accurately understanding human...
Young children exhibit several deficits in reasoning about their own and other people’s mental state...
ABSTRACT—Assessing what other people know and believe is critical for accurately understanding human...
This study investigated two different expressions of the so-called curse of knowledge in primary sch...
This study investigated two different expressions of the so-called curse of knowl- edge in primary s...
ABSTRACT—Biases in reasoning can provide insight into under-lying processing mechanisms. We demonstr...
Some children are prone to interpret others’ behavior as stemming from hostile intentions, even when...
Some children are prone to interpret others’ behavior as stemming from hostile intentions, even when...
Are incorrect judgments on false belief tasks better explained within the framework of a conceptual ...
Young children seem to overextend a 'seeing = knowing rule' so that they neglect to notice that peop...