•  61
    Do children start out thinking they don't know their own minds?
    with Ulrich Teucher, Mark Bennett, Fenja Ziegler, and Rebecca Wyton
    Mind and Language 24 (3): 328-346. 2009.
    Various researchers have suggested that below 7 years of age children do not recognize that they are the authority on knowledge about themselves, a suggestion that seems counter-intuitive because it raises the possibility that children do not appreciate their privileged first-person access to their own minds. Unlike previous research, children in the current investigation quantified knowledge and even 5-year-olds tended to assign relatively more to themselves than to an adult (Studies 1 and 2). …Read more
  •  61
    How do young children process beliefs about beliefs?: Evidence from response latency
    with Haruo Kikuno and Fenja Ziegler
    Mind and Language 22 (3). 2007.
    Are incorrect judgments on false belief tasks better explained within the framework of a conceptual change theory or a bias theory? Conceptual change theory posits a change in the form of reasoning from 3 to 4 years old while bias theory posits that processing factors are responsible for errors among younger children. The results from three experiments showed that children who failed a test of false belief took as long to respond as those who passed, and both groups of children took longer to re…Read more
  •  44
    The double empathy problem, camouflage, and the value of expertise from experience
    with Sarah Cassidy and Elizabeth Sheppard
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42. 2019.
    To understand why autistic people are misperceived in the way Jaswal & Akhtar suggest, we should embrace concepts like the “double empathy problem” and camouflaging and recognize the negative consequences these have for mental health in autism. Moreover, we need to value expertise from experience so that autistic people have a voice and indeed a stake in research into autism.
  •  34
    Opacity and discourse referents: Object identity and object properties
    with Manuel Sprung and Josef Perner
    Mind and Language 22 (3). 2007.
    It has been found that children appreciate the limited substitutability of co-referential terms in opaque contexts a year or two after they pass false belief tasks (e.g. Apperly and Robinson, 1998, 2001, 2003). This paper aims to explain this delay. Three- to six-year-old children were tested with stories where a protagonist was either only partially informed or had a false belief about a particular object. Only a few children had problems predicting the protagonist’s action based on his partial…Read more
  •  16
    Seeing the world through others’ minds: Inferring social context from behaviour
    with Yvonne Teoh, Emma Wallis, and Ian D. Stephen
    Cognition 159 (C): 48-60. 2017.
  •  9
    Being able to understand minds does not result from a conceptual shift
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 27 (1): 117-118. 2004.
    If anything, Carpendale & Lewis's (C&L's) target article could have gone even further in challenging the view that a radical conceptual shift equips children with a theory of mind. Also, the authors should have elaborated on why their social constructivist account is more plausible than nativism. Their argument against simulation theory is perhaps the least-developed part of their thesis, and does little service to their cause.