Title of article
Representing metarepresentations: Is there Theory of Mind-specific cognition?
Author/Authors
Egeth، نويسنده , , Marc and Kurzban، نويسنده , , Robert، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
11
From page
244
To page
254
Abstract
What cognitive mechanisms underlie Theory of Mind? Some infer domain-specific Theory of Mind cognition based the pattern of children diagnosed with autism failing the False Belief test but passing the False Photograph test. However, we argue that the False Belief test entails various task demands the False Photograph task does not, including the necessity to represent a higher-order representation (a metarepresentation), thus confounding the inference of domain-specificity. Instead, a general difficulty that affects representations of metarepresentations might account for the seeming domain-specific failure. Here we find that False-Belief failing False-Photograph passing children fail the Meta Photograph test, a new photograph-domain test that requires subjects to represent a metarepresentation. We conclude that people who fail the False Belief test but pass the False Photograph test do not necessarily have a content-specific Theory of Mind deficit. Instead, the general ability to represent representations and metarepresentations might underlie Theory of Mind.
Keywords
AUTISM , META , Metacognition , Evolution , REPRESENTATIONAL , representation , theory of mind , Module , Metarepresentation , social
Journal title
Consciousness and Cognition
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Consciousness and Cognition
Record number
2291256
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