Three experiments were carried out to determine whether there is a lag in predicting surprise relative to false belief. All 3 experiments used "backwards reasoning" tasks. The findings were that ( a ) there is a lag in predicting surprise relative to false belief, ( b ) by 5 or 6 years of age children claim that one will be surprised when they gain knowledge of that which they were previously ignorant or when they discover that they had previously held a false belief, ( c ) by 7 to 9 years of age they understand that surprise will more likely result from false beliefs rather than mere ignorance, and ( d ) children's difficulty understanding surprise as specifically belief-based does not likely stem from information processing limitations. I...
This report is intended to help arbitrate the unsettled matter of when in the course of their early ...
Surprise has been explored as a cognitive‐emotional phenomenon that impacts many aspects of mental l...
Three- and 4-year-old children were tested using videos of puppets in various versions of a theory o...
Misconceptions about scientific concepts often prevail even if learners are confronted with conflict...
Surprise is often defined in terms of disconfirmed expectations, whereby the surprisingness of an ev...
Surprise is often defined in terms of disconfirmed expectations, whereby the surprisingness of an ev...
Decades of research find that young children look longer at surprising events than expected ones, an...
Recent studies suggest that by the second year of life, infants can attribute false beliefs to agent...
Early theories of surprise, including Darwin's, argued that it was predominantly a basic emotion. Re...
Merging recent surprise theories renders the prediction that surprise is a function of how strong an...
Are incorrect judgments on false belief tasks better explained within the framework of a conceptual ...
The reactions of 58 infants to expectancy violation by digitally filtering the experimenter's voice ...
Surprise is often defined in terms of disconfirmed expectations, whereby the surprisingness of an ev...
The reactions of 58 infants to expectancy violation by digitally filtering the experimenter's voice ...
ABSTRACT—Biases in reasoning can provide insight into under-lying processing mechanisms. We demonstr...
This report is intended to help arbitrate the unsettled matter of when in the course of their early ...
Surprise has been explored as a cognitive‐emotional phenomenon that impacts many aspects of mental l...
Three- and 4-year-old children were tested using videos of puppets in various versions of a theory o...
Misconceptions about scientific concepts often prevail even if learners are confronted with conflict...
Surprise is often defined in terms of disconfirmed expectations, whereby the surprisingness of an ev...
Surprise is often defined in terms of disconfirmed expectations, whereby the surprisingness of an ev...
Decades of research find that young children look longer at surprising events than expected ones, an...
Recent studies suggest that by the second year of life, infants can attribute false beliefs to agent...
Early theories of surprise, including Darwin's, argued that it was predominantly a basic emotion. Re...
Merging recent surprise theories renders the prediction that surprise is a function of how strong an...
Are incorrect judgments on false belief tasks better explained within the framework of a conceptual ...
The reactions of 58 infants to expectancy violation by digitally filtering the experimenter's voice ...
Surprise is often defined in terms of disconfirmed expectations, whereby the surprisingness of an ev...
The reactions of 58 infants to expectancy violation by digitally filtering the experimenter's voice ...
ABSTRACT—Biases in reasoning can provide insight into under-lying processing mechanisms. We demonstr...
This report is intended to help arbitrate the unsettled matter of when in the course of their early ...
Surprise has been explored as a cognitive‐emotional phenomenon that impacts many aspects of mental l...
Three- and 4-year-old children were tested using videos of puppets in various versions of a theory o...