Children's understanding of the knowledge prerequisites of drawing and pretending.

Dev Psychol

Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville 22904-4400, USA.

Published: November 2002

Many young children will claim that someone is pretending to be something even when the person does not know what that something is. To examine whether children's failure to take knowledge prerequisites into account is part of a more fundamental problem in recognizing how mental representations constrain external ones, the authors asked children whether an artist who did not know what something was, yet whose drawing bore resemblance to it, was drawing it. The same questions were asked regarding pretending. Children performed similarly on pretending and drawing questions, and performance on both questions improved when the protagonists' point of view was emphasized. Performance for drawing improved somewhat when alternative goals were stated. Further, cross-sectional data indicated that understanding how knowledge relates to producing external representations increases gradually from age 4 to age 8, suggesting that experiential factors may be crucial to this understanding.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037//0012-1649.38.6.1004DOI Listing

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