AI Article Synopsis

  • Theory of Mind (ToM) is the ability to recognize that others have different beliefs and perspectives, and it involves tasks requiring self-other interference.
  • A study with 142 participants examined how individual differences in executive function, specifically inhibitory control, relate to this interference in ToM tasks.
  • Results revealed that self-other interference in two different ToM tasks was distinct and influenced by varying aspects of inhibitory control, indicating that ToM performance may be influenced by multiple factors beyond just executive function.

Article Abstract

Theory of mind (ToM), the ability to understand that other agents have different beliefs, desires, and knowledge than oneself, has been extensively researched. Theory of mind tasks involve participants dealing with interference between their self-perspective and another agent's perspective, and this interference has been related to executive function, particularly to inhibitory control. This study assessed whether there are individual differences in self-other interference, and whether these effects are due to individual differences in executive function. A total of 142 participants completed two ToM (the director task and a Level 1 visual perspective-taking task), which both involve self-other interference, and a battery of inhibitory control tasks. The relationships between the tasks were examined using path analysis. Results showed that the self-other interference effects of the two ToM tasks were dissociable, with individual differences in performance on the ToM tasks being unrelated and performance in each predicted by different inhibitory control tasks. We suggest that self-other differences are part of the nature of ToM tasks, but self-other interference is not a unitary construct. Instead, self-other differences result in interference effects in various ways and at different stages of processing, and these effects may not be a major limiting step for adults' performance on typical ToM tasks. Further work is needed to assess other factors that may limit adults' ToM performance and hence explain individual differences in social ability.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7000534PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13423-019-01656-zDOI Listing

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