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Jill de Villiers, Angelika Kratzer, Tom Roeper. “From Evidence to Belief: Developmental Precursors for False Belief Ascriptions”:http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TI1YzY2Z. Project description submitted to NSF, Smith College and University of Massachusetts at Amherst January 2000.
bq. Recently, a fruitful line of inquiry has linked children’s acquisition of the language of the mind to their developing understanding of other minds. In particular, a cascade of linguistic effects regarding sentences embedded under mental verbs has been shown to occur around the age of four years for the average child, roughly the age when children start passing standard false belief tests. This set of linguistic effects is summarized briefly below. In the proposed study, we will turn our attention to possible precursors for the ability to ascribe a false belief to another person. These precursors include knowledge about how people form beliefs from the evidence of their senses and by what evidence they judge the existence of such belief states in others. To explore such questions, we will examine how children acquire some selected constructions relating to the path leading from evidence to belief: epistemic uses of modals such as ‘must’ and ‘might’ and direct and indirect perception reports using verbs like ’see’.
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This entry was posted by fintel on Wednesday, October 15th, 2003, at 9:00 am.
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