In their second year of life, infants are able to represent others' mental states and understand that agents’ false beliefs can be corrected when relevant information is shared with them through communication. In our false belief correction paradigm, we investigated whether 9-month-olds expect agents to communicate to update a partner's false belief. Infants (N = 19, mean age = 273 days, 12F) were presented with animated videos of two unfamiliar agents. In the familiarization phase, we showed videos in which one of the agents aimed to approach a target object hidden in one of two containers. The test phase involved false belief and true belief trials. In false belief trials, the protagonist had incorrect information about the current location of the target object, while the other agent knew its location. In true belief trials, the location of the target object was known by both agents. Before the protagonist approached the baited container, the two agents exchanged variable non-speech sound sequences – which allow communicative information transfer – in both conditions. We predicted that infants would expect variable signal exchanges in false belief trials, where correcting the protagonist's false belief was necessary. Since the expectation of relevant information elicits synchronization of EEG theta rhythm, we hypothesized to find an increase in the theta-band brain oscillations in the false belief condition in contrast to the true belief condition before communication took place. 8 participants were included in the preliminary analysis. We observed an increase in theta oscillations in the left temporal region in the false belief condition only. This suggests that 9-month-olds expect the transfer of goal-relevant communicative information in a false belief context. Our findings indicate that infants attribute mental states to communicative agents and expect communicative exchanges between the agents when their relevant mental states need to be updated.

Nine-month-olds’ expectation of communicative information transfer to correct a false belief / Guerrini, Alice; Tauzin, Tibor; Mazzi, Giulia; Parise, Eugenio. - (2025). (Intervento presentato al convegno 16th Dubrovnik Conference on Cognitive Science Understanding the Self and the Other tenutosi a Dubrovnik, Croazia nel 22nd May - 25th May 2025).

Nine-month-olds’ expectation of communicative information transfer to correct a false belief

Guerrini, Alice
Co-primo
;
Mazzi, Giulia
Secondo
;
Parise, Eugenio
Ultimo
2025-01-01

Abstract

In their second year of life, infants are able to represent others' mental states and understand that agents’ false beliefs can be corrected when relevant information is shared with them through communication. In our false belief correction paradigm, we investigated whether 9-month-olds expect agents to communicate to update a partner's false belief. Infants (N = 19, mean age = 273 days, 12F) were presented with animated videos of two unfamiliar agents. In the familiarization phase, we showed videos in which one of the agents aimed to approach a target object hidden in one of two containers. The test phase involved false belief and true belief trials. In false belief trials, the protagonist had incorrect information about the current location of the target object, while the other agent knew its location. In true belief trials, the location of the target object was known by both agents. Before the protagonist approached the baited container, the two agents exchanged variable non-speech sound sequences – which allow communicative information transfer – in both conditions. We predicted that infants would expect variable signal exchanges in false belief trials, where correcting the protagonist's false belief was necessary. Since the expectation of relevant information elicits synchronization of EEG theta rhythm, we hypothesized to find an increase in the theta-band brain oscillations in the false belief condition in contrast to the true belief condition before communication took place. 8 participants were included in the preliminary analysis. We observed an increase in theta oscillations in the left temporal region in the false belief condition only. This suggests that 9-month-olds expect the transfer of goal-relevant communicative information in a false belief context. Our findings indicate that infants attribute mental states to communicative agents and expect communicative exchanges between the agents when their relevant mental states need to be updated.
2025
16th Dubrovnik Conference on Cognitive Science - Understanding the Self and the Other
Settore PSIC-02/A - Psicologia dello sviluppo e dell'educazione
Settore PSIC-01/B - Neuropsicologia e neuroscienze cognitive
Nine-month-olds’ expectation of communicative information transfer to correct a false belief / Guerrini, Alice; Tauzin, Tibor; Mazzi, Giulia; Parise, Eugenio. - (2025). (Intervento presentato al convegno 16th Dubrovnik Conference on Cognitive Science Understanding the Self and the Other tenutosi a Dubrovnik, Croazia nel 22nd May - 25th May 2025).
Guerrini, Alice; Tauzin, Tibor; Mazzi, Giulia; Parise, Eugenio
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11572/457874
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