It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding is necessary for the development of first-order Theory of Mind (ToM): the ability to attribute beliefs to others. This raises the question whether the acquisition of double embedded sentences is related to, and perhaps even necessary for, the development of second-order ToM: the ability to attribute beliefs about beliefs to others. This study tested 55 children (aged 7–10) on their ToM understanding in a false-belief task and on their elicited production of sentence embeddings. We found that second-order ToM passers produced mainly double embeddings, whereas first-order ToM passers produced mainly single embeddings. Furthermore, a better perf...
Theory of Mind (ToM) encompasses a wide variety of abilities, which develop during childhood. Howeve...
Even though there are numerous articles and book chapters regarding children’s Theory of Mind (ToM) ...
to show that young children, relatively fluent in the language of belief attribution, did not have t...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
Theory of Mind (ToM) research demonstrated 3- to 4-year old children to show false belief (FB) under...
Theory of Mind (ToM) research demonstrated 3- to 4-year old children to show false belief (FB) under...
Theory of Mind (ToM) encompasses a wide variety of abilities, which develop during childhood. Howeve...
Theory of Mind (ToM) encompasses a wide variety of abilities, which develop during childhood. Howeve...
Theory of Mind (ToM) encompasses a wide variety of abilities, which develop during childhood. Howeve...
Even though there are numerous articles and book chapters regarding children’s Theory of Mind (ToM) ...
to show that young children, relatively fluent in the language of belief attribution, did not have t...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
It has been argued (e.g., by De Villiers and colleagues) that the acquisition of sentence embedding ...
Theory of Mind (ToM) research demonstrated 3- to 4-year old children to show false belief (FB) under...
Theory of Mind (ToM) research demonstrated 3- to 4-year old children to show false belief (FB) under...
Theory of Mind (ToM) encompasses a wide variety of abilities, which develop during childhood. Howeve...
Theory of Mind (ToM) encompasses a wide variety of abilities, which develop during childhood. Howeve...
Theory of Mind (ToM) encompasses a wide variety of abilities, which develop during childhood. Howeve...
Even though there are numerous articles and book chapters regarding children’s Theory of Mind (ToM) ...
to show that young children, relatively fluent in the language of belief attribution, did not have t...