The original relational triangulation perspective taking protocol (RT-PTP-M1; Guinther, ) was extended with a second training and testing module (RT-PTP-M2) showing contextual influence over derivation of another's "false beliefs" during an analog of the Sally-Anne test for Theory of Mind (Baron-Cohen, Leslie, & Frith, ; Wimmer & Perner, ) in verbally competent adults. Under the respective contextual control of experimental stimuli X and X , participants first learned through direct conditioning procedures that avatars A and A "behave the same way" towards target stimuli. Participants then made object discriminations under X according to the spatial perspective of A , who saw an initial target at a particular location but could not see that the target was later swapped with a second target; reporting the identity of the initial target was reinforced for participants. Among participants who had failed baseline testing, this directly trained "false belief attribution" repertoire was then spontaneously emitted by participants relative to the perspective of A under X during the final test for derivation. Other participants were able to derive false belief under X without the X attribution training. These results suggest the RT-PTP procedures were successful in causing X to acquire context-of-relating functions for exerting control over perspectival relational triangulation.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jeab.480DOI Listing

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