Three experiments with a total of 120 children between 4 and 9 years of age revealed systematic errors in the recall of deictic terms from a narrative. In some cases, the terms were inconsistent with the perspective of a protagonist. The errors occurred in all age groups and were at the same level whether the protagonist was "good" or "bad" but were less common in a narrative that did not include a protagonist. The pattern of errors suggests that children adopted a perspective within the narrative. Moreover, it seems that whereas the form of the narrative is sufficient to provoke a shift in perspective, children might find it even easier to adopt a perspective when the narrative content is about a protagonist. It thus seems that the form an...
This study assesses how the state of knowledge 4-to-11 years old children share with their interlocu...
A review of the current literature shows that by the age of two and a half (and probably earlier), c...
The capacity to express emotions and beliefs in an articulate way is central to social communication...
Three experiments with a total of 120 children between 4 and 9 years of age revealed systematic erro...
The enjoyment of fiction and narrative depends on our ability to step outside our own perspective an...
This study explored relationships between perspective-taking, emotion understanding, and children's ...
The enjoyment of fiction and narrative depends on our ability to step outside our own perspective an...
The focus of this article is the manner in which 4 to 12 year old children deal with the “evalua-tiv...
The acquisition of narrative skills is a developmental process that takes many years. Although child...
In comprehending stories, adults create mental models from which they follow the actions of the char...
This study examined narratives written by ten seventh graders. Each subject wrote three narratives, ...
International audienceThe focus of this article is the manner in which 4 to 12 year old children dea...
Adults adopt the traits of characters in narratives, but little is known about whether children do s...
Perspective-taking is a new topic in the field of behavior analysis and has become of extreme intere...
Children's narratives consist of event clauses and contextualizing or 'evaluative' clauses. Bamberg ...
This study assesses how the state of knowledge 4-to-11 years old children share with their interlocu...
A review of the current literature shows that by the age of two and a half (and probably earlier), c...
The capacity to express emotions and beliefs in an articulate way is central to social communication...
Three experiments with a total of 120 children between 4 and 9 years of age revealed systematic erro...
The enjoyment of fiction and narrative depends on our ability to step outside our own perspective an...
This study explored relationships between perspective-taking, emotion understanding, and children's ...
The enjoyment of fiction and narrative depends on our ability to step outside our own perspective an...
The focus of this article is the manner in which 4 to 12 year old children deal with the “evalua-tiv...
The acquisition of narrative skills is a developmental process that takes many years. Although child...
In comprehending stories, adults create mental models from which they follow the actions of the char...
This study examined narratives written by ten seventh graders. Each subject wrote three narratives, ...
International audienceThe focus of this article is the manner in which 4 to 12 year old children dea...
Adults adopt the traits of characters in narratives, but little is known about whether children do s...
Perspective-taking is a new topic in the field of behavior analysis and has become of extreme intere...
Children's narratives consist of event clauses and contextualizing or 'evaluative' clauses. Bamberg ...
This study assesses how the state of knowledge 4-to-11 years old children share with their interlocu...
A review of the current literature shows that by the age of two and a half (and probably earlier), c...
The capacity to express emotions and beliefs in an articulate way is central to social communication...