It is now well established that relative to their younger counterparts, older adults experience difficulties on tasks that require the conscious and explicit processing of others' mental states (e.g., beliefs, intentions; theory of mind [ToM]). Despite the importance of relatively automatic and unconscious mental state attribution processes in everyday life, no study to date has tested whether tasks that require the implicit processing of others' belief states also show age-related changes. In this study, younger and older adults completed an implicit false belief task, in which their eye movement patterns were monitored while they passively viewed true and false belief movies. In addition, they were assessed on measures of explicit ToM pro...
The current study examined how social cognition – specifically, belief-state processing – changes ac...
Eye movements in Sally-Anne false-belief tasks appear to reflect the ability to implicitly monitor t...
Theory of mind (ToM) is the ability to take other people's perspective by inferring their mental sta...
A critical part of our day-to-day lives is our ability to understand the mental states (beliefs, des...
The ability to understand other people’s mental states – beliefs, desires, knowledge – plays a key r...
Theory of Mind (ToM) – the ability to understand and attribute mental states to ourselves and other ...
Theory of Mind (ToM), or social cognition, refers to the ability to understand, compute, and attribu...
This study explored how efficiently younger (18-30 years) and older (65-80 years) adults compute bel...
The ability to attribute mental states to others is crucial for social competency. To assess mentali...
Theory of Mind, or social cognition, refers to the ability to understand, compute, and attribute men...
The current study examined how social cognition – specifically, belief-state processing – changes ac...
There is now considerable evidence that neurotypical individuals track the internal cognitions of ot...
Theory of mind (ToM) refers to humans' ability to recognize the existence of mental states, such as ...
Growing evidence indicates that Theory of Mind (ToM) declines in normal aging. However, the majority...
The purpose of the current research was to examine age-related differences in false recognition and ...
The current study examined how social cognition – specifically, belief-state processing – changes ac...
Eye movements in Sally-Anne false-belief tasks appear to reflect the ability to implicitly monitor t...
Theory of mind (ToM) is the ability to take other people's perspective by inferring their mental sta...
A critical part of our day-to-day lives is our ability to understand the mental states (beliefs, des...
The ability to understand other people’s mental states – beliefs, desires, knowledge – plays a key r...
Theory of Mind (ToM) – the ability to understand and attribute mental states to ourselves and other ...
Theory of Mind (ToM), or social cognition, refers to the ability to understand, compute, and attribu...
This study explored how efficiently younger (18-30 years) and older (65-80 years) adults compute bel...
The ability to attribute mental states to others is crucial for social competency. To assess mentali...
Theory of Mind, or social cognition, refers to the ability to understand, compute, and attribute men...
The current study examined how social cognition – specifically, belief-state processing – changes ac...
There is now considerable evidence that neurotypical individuals track the internal cognitions of ot...
Theory of mind (ToM) refers to humans' ability to recognize the existence of mental states, such as ...
Growing evidence indicates that Theory of Mind (ToM) declines in normal aging. However, the majority...
The purpose of the current research was to examine age-related differences in false recognition and ...
The current study examined how social cognition – specifically, belief-state processing – changes ac...
Eye movements in Sally-Anne false-belief tasks appear to reflect the ability to implicitly monitor t...
Theory of mind (ToM) is the ability to take other people's perspective by inferring their mental sta...