•  6
    What Does Knowledge Explain? Commentary on Jennifer Nagel, ‘Knowledge as a Mental State’
    In Tamar Szabó Gendler & John Hawthorne (eds.), Oxford Studies in Epistemology: Volume 4, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 309-320. 2013.
    Knowledge is a mental state: Nagel may be right about this but wrong to suppose that knowledge is prior to belief in the sense that being able to recognize belief somehow depends on having a concept of knowledge. This commentary identifies objections to Nagel’s arguments for priority. Some of these objections arise from Nagel’s selective use of developmental evidence on mindreading: additional findings reveal a more complex (and more interesting) picture of how abilities to recognize and track k…Read more
  •  4
    Joint Action and Development
    Philosophical Quarterly 62 (246): 23-47. 2011.
    Given the premise that joint action plays some role in explaining how humans come to understand minds, what could joint action be? Not what a leading account, Michael Bratman's, says it is. For on that account engaging in joint action involves sharing intentions and sharing intentions requires much of the understanding of minds whose development is supposed to be explained by appeal to joint action. This paper therefore offers an account of a different kind of joint action, an account compatible…Read more
  • Gaining Knowledge via Other Minds: Children’s Flexible Trust in Others as Sources of Information
    with Robinson , Elizabeth , and Erika Nurmsoo
    British Journal of Developmental Psychology 29 (4): 961-980. 2011.
  •  32
    The role played by motor representations in tracking others’ belief-based actions remains unclear. In experiment 1, the dynamics of adults’ anticipatory mediolateral motor activity (leftwards–rightwards leaning on a balance board) as well as hand trajectories were measured as they attempted to help an agent who had a true or false belief about an object’s location. Participants’ leaning was influenced by the agent’s belief about the target’s location when the agent was free to act but not when s…Read more
  • Cue Competition Effects and Young Children’s Causal and Counterfactual Inferences
    with Teresa McCormack, Hoerl A., Burns Christoph, and Patrick
    Developmental Psychology 45 (6): 1563-1575. 2009.
  • Towards a Blueprint for a Social Animal
    Minimal Cooperation And Shared Agency. 2020.
  •  17
    Effort-based decision making in joint action: Evidence of a sense of fairness
    with Marcell Sz\’ Ekely and John Michael
    Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 112 104601. 2024.
  •  12
    Coordinated decision-making boosts altruistic motivation—But not trust
    with Matthew Chennells, Mateusz Woźniak, and John Michael
    PLoS ONE 17 (10). 2022.
  •  1
    Are Children Gullible?
    with Erika Nurmsoo and Elizabeth Robinson
    Review of Philosophy and Psychology. forthcoming.
  • What Does Knowledge Explain? Commentary on Jennifer Nagel
    In Tamar Szabó Gendler & John Hawthorne (eds.), Oxford Studies in Epistemology, Oxford University Press. 2005.
  •  14
  • Joint Action: A Minimalist Approach
    In Julian Kiverstein (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of the Social Mind., Routledge. pp. 357-369. 2016.
  • Seeing It Both Ways: Using a Double-Cuing Task to Investigate the Role of Spatial Cuing in Level-1 Visual Perspective-Taking
    with John Michael, Thomas Wolf, Cl\’Ement Letesson, Joshua Skewes, and Jakob Hohwy
    Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 44 (5): 693-702. 2018.
  • Interpersonal Functioning in Borderline Personality Disorder Traits: A Social Media Perspective
    with Jinnie Ooi, John Michael, Sakari Lemola, Cynthia Siew, Walasek S. Q., and Lukasz
    Scientific Reports 10 (1). 2020.
  • Seeing Ain‘t Believing: How We Read Other Minds
    with Corrado Sinigaglia, D. Quarona, and Giuseppe Riva
    In Preparation 10 (x). 2021.
  •  272
    Three strategies for shared intention: plural, aggregate and reductive
    Philosophical Psychology 38 (5): 1909-1931. 2025.
    When deciding on a strategy for explicating shared intention, we all face two fundamental questions. First, can an intention or any other mental state have more than one subject? A positive answer to this allows the plural subject strategy: shared intention is a matter of there being one mental state with two or more subjects. Mental states are shared in the same sense that siblings share a parent; no simpler view exists. A negative answer blocks the plural subject strategy. This motivates askin…Read more
  •  4
    The development of children's minds raises fundamental questions, from how we are able to know about basic aspects of the world such as objects and actions to how we come to grasp mental states. The Developing Mind is the first book to critically introduce and examine philosophical questions concerning children's cognitive development and considers the implications of scientific breakthroughs for the philosophy of developmental psychology. The book explores central topics in developmental psycho…Read more
  •  132
    When two or more people coordinate their actions in space and time to produce a joint outcome, they perform a joint action. The perceptual, cognitive, and motor processes that enable individuals to coordinate their actions with others have been receiving increasing attention during the last decade, complementing earlier work on shared intentionality and discourse. This chapter reviews current theoretical concepts and empirical findings in order to provide a structured overview of the state of th…Read more
  •  140
    Principles of belief acquisition. How we read other minds
    with M. T. Pascarelli, D. Quarona, G. Barchiesi, G. Riva, and C. Sinigaglia
    Consciousness and Cognition 117 (C): 103625. 2024.
    Reading other minds is a pervasive feature of human social life. A decade of research indicates that people can automatically track an agent’s beliefs regardless of whether this is required. But little is known about the principles t guide automatic belief tracking. In six experiments adapting a false belief task introduced by Kovács et al. (2010), we tested whether belief tracking is interrupted by either an agent’s lack of perceptual access or else by an agent’s constrained action possibilitie…Read more