Please, read the appropriate chapter and answer the following questions:
1. What is pretend play, and why does Leslie think it’s so important? Have you ever seen a child engage in pretend play that made you think differently about it?
2. What’s the false belief test? Do you think it’s a good way to measure how we understand others’ thoughts? Why or why not?
3. Onishi and Baillargeon think even infants who can’t talk yet understand false beliefs. Does that idea surprise you? Why or why not?
4. Baron-Cohen has a model for how we ‘read minds.’ What are the key components of his system, and how do you think they help us understand others?
Chapter 14 – Mindreadimg and Simulation
Please, read the appropriate chapter and answer the following questions:
1. Can you explain the reasoning behind the selection processor hypothesis in your own words? What creative ways can you think of to test this hypothesis?
Questions on Mindreading and Simulation:
1. Can you explain the reasoning behind the selection processor hypothesis in your own words? What creative ways can you think of to test this hypothesis?
The selection processor hypothesis suggests that when we try to understand someone else’s mental state (their beliefs, desires, intentions), our own minds don’t just passively simulate their entire mental landscape. Instead, our minds generate multiple possible interpretations or “candidate mental states” for the other person. Then, a “selection processor” kicks in to evaluate these candidates based on available evidence – such as the person’s behavior, the context of the situation, and our prior knowledge about them and people in general. The selection processor chooses the most likely or plausible interpretation from the generated possibilities.
Questions on Mindreading and Simulation:
1. Can you explain the reasoning behind the selection processor hypothesis in your own words? What creative ways can you think of to test this hypothesis?
The selection processor hypothesis suggests that when we try to understand someone else’s mental state (their beliefs, desires, intentions), our own minds don’t just passively simulate their entire mental landscape. Instead, our minds generate multiple possible interpretations or “candidate mental states” for the other person. Then, a “selection processor” kicks in to evaluate these candidates based on available evidence – such as the person’s behavior, the context of the situation, and our prior knowledge about them and people in general. The selection processor chooses the most likely or plausible interpretation from the generated possibilities.