Humans operate with a "theory of mind" with which they are able to understand that others' actions are driven not by reality but by beliefs about reality, even when those beliefs are false. Although great apes share with humans many social-cognitive skills, they have repeatedly failed experimental tests of such false-belief understanding. We use an anticipatory looking test (originally developed for human infants) to show that three species of great apes reliably look in anticipation of an agent acting on a location where he falsely believes an object to be, even though the apes themselves know that the object is no longer there. Our results suggest that great apes also operate, at least on an implicit level, with an understanding of false ...
Financial support came from Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (K-CONNEX...
Recent findings from anticipatory-looking false-belief tests have shown that nonhuman great apes and...
Humans are ultra-social: they spontaneously incorporate others’ mental states into their action-plan...
Humans operate with a "theory-of-mind" with which they understand that others’ actions are driven no...
Using a novel eye-tracking test, we recently showed that great apes anticipate that other individual...
Human social life depends on theory of mind, the ability to attribute mental states to oneself and o...
Understanding the behavior of others in a wide variety of circumstances requires an understanding of...
Understanding the behavior of others in a wide variety of circumstances requires an understanding of...
Although the extent to which some nonhuman animals understand mental states is currently under debat...
Much debate concerns whether any nonhuman animals share with humans the ability to infer others' men...
Making subtle and extensive use of eye-tracking technology, Krupenye and colleagues showed that, lik...
Several species can detect when they are uncertain about what decision tomake—revealed by opting out...
A nonverbal false belief task was administered to children (mean age 5 years) and two great ape spec...
Financial support came from Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (K-CONNEX...
Recent findings from anticipatory-looking false-belief tests have shown that nonhuman great apes and...
Humans are ultra-social: they spontaneously incorporate others’ mental states into their action-plan...
Humans operate with a "theory-of-mind" with which they understand that others’ actions are driven no...
Using a novel eye-tracking test, we recently showed that great apes anticipate that other individual...
Human social life depends on theory of mind, the ability to attribute mental states to oneself and o...
Understanding the behavior of others in a wide variety of circumstances requires an understanding of...
Understanding the behavior of others in a wide variety of circumstances requires an understanding of...
Although the extent to which some nonhuman animals understand mental states is currently under debat...
Much debate concerns whether any nonhuman animals share with humans the ability to infer others' men...
Making subtle and extensive use of eye-tracking technology, Krupenye and colleagues showed that, lik...
Several species can detect when they are uncertain about what decision tomake—revealed by opting out...
A nonverbal false belief task was administered to children (mean age 5 years) and two great ape spec...
Financial support came from Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (K-CONNEX...
Recent findings from anticipatory-looking false-belief tests have shown that nonhuman great apes and...
Humans are ultra-social: they spontaneously incorporate others’ mental states into their action-plan...