Unpacking mentalizing: The roles of age and executive functioning in self-other appraisal and perspective taking.

Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)

Developmental Clinical Psychology Research Unit, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mentalizing involves understanding oneself and others from different viewpoints; this study investigates how individuals switch between these perspectives.
  • It analyzes 88 adolescents and 163 young adults using the Self Other Switching Task to measure their mental representation flexibility and the influence of age and executive functioning.
  • Findings show that participants were generally quicker to make self-referential attributions, with younger individuals taking longer to switch from self to other perspectives, and better working memory linked to improved perspective switching.

Article Abstract

Mentalizing involves a number of psychological processes designed to appraise self and others from different points of view. Factors affecting the flexibility in the ability to switch between self-other representations and perspectives remain yet unclear. In this study, we sought to (a) assess individual variability in processing and switching between self and other-oriented mental representations and perspectives in a sample of typically developing youths and (b) examine how age and executive functioning may affect this switching process. A total of 88 adolescents and 163 young adults completed the Self-Other Switching Task, a new computerised personality trait attribution paradigm. Measures of sustained attention, working memory, and inhibition were used to assess executive functioning. Linear mixed models showed that participants were faster at making attributions from the self-perspective and when referring to the self. They were also slower to disengage/switch from the self-perspective and the self-representation. Whereas there were no age differences in self-other switching efficiency per se, adolescents were slower than adults on trials involving appraisals of the other from the self-perspective. Importantly, higher verbal working memory scores were associated with better performance on incongruent trials and with switching scores. This study demonstrates the utility of a new experimental task permitting to tease apart the effects of self-other appraisal and perspective switching within a single paradigm. Our behavioural results highlight a self-cost observed in switching between representations and perspectives and emphasise the roles of age and working memory in the simultaneous processing of self- and other-oriented information.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17470218241311415DOI Listing

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