Purpose: This study examined how complexity of maternal epistemological beliefs predicted mothers\u27 and children’s talk about the mind. Method: Twenty-eight mothers of 5- to 10-year-olds completed a measure of receptive vocabulary, and mothers and children participated in a storytelling task specifically designed to elicit talk about the mind. Their use of mental state terms to encode pragmatic functions and mothers\u27 epistemologies were assessed and compared. Results: Maternal mental state talk and amount of talk increased with epistemological complexity. With the number of utterances held constant, mothers with simple, dualistic perspectives of knowledge used mental states more often to direct interaction; mothers with more complex ep...
grantor: University of TorontoWe investigated the developmental trajectories of mental sta...
grantor: University of TorontoWe investigated the developmental trajectories of mental sta...
The purpose of this study was to conduct a detailed examination of the ways mothers use mental verbs...
Purpose: This study examined how complexity of maternal epistemological beliefs predicted mothers\u2...
In recent years, a number of studies that have examined how social experiences are related to childr...
A new questionnaire, the Maternal Mental State Input Inventory (MMSII) was created to measure mother...
In this study, we investigated the relationship between mothers' psychological lexicon and children'...
In relating parent-child conversation to children’s social cognitive development, we examined how mo...
The current project investigates relations between mothers’ beliefs about knowledge (personal episte...
Recent research has shown that children under two years demonstrate some early social understanding....
Research into social influences on young children’s growing understanding of others’ inner states ha...
This study examined the predictive power of maternal mind mindedness on children\u27s theory of mind...
Research into social influences on young children’s growing understanding of others’ inner states ha...
Research into social influences on young children’s growing understanding of others’ inner states ha...
Children's exposure to mind-related talk has been shown to foster young children's metacognitive und...
grantor: University of TorontoWe investigated the developmental trajectories of mental sta...
grantor: University of TorontoWe investigated the developmental trajectories of mental sta...
The purpose of this study was to conduct a detailed examination of the ways mothers use mental verbs...
Purpose: This study examined how complexity of maternal epistemological beliefs predicted mothers\u2...
In recent years, a number of studies that have examined how social experiences are related to childr...
A new questionnaire, the Maternal Mental State Input Inventory (MMSII) was created to measure mother...
In this study, we investigated the relationship between mothers' psychological lexicon and children'...
In relating parent-child conversation to children’s social cognitive development, we examined how mo...
The current project investigates relations between mothers’ beliefs about knowledge (personal episte...
Recent research has shown that children under two years demonstrate some early social understanding....
Research into social influences on young children’s growing understanding of others’ inner states ha...
This study examined the predictive power of maternal mind mindedness on children\u27s theory of mind...
Research into social influences on young children’s growing understanding of others’ inner states ha...
Research into social influences on young children’s growing understanding of others’ inner states ha...
Children's exposure to mind-related talk has been shown to foster young children's metacognitive und...
grantor: University of TorontoWe investigated the developmental trajectories of mental sta...
grantor: University of TorontoWe investigated the developmental trajectories of mental sta...
The purpose of this study was to conduct a detailed examination of the ways mothers use mental verbs...