Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Belief" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Relationship Between Lumbar Multifidus Morphometry and Pain/Disability in Individuals With Chronic Nonspecific Low Back Pain After Considering Demographics, Fear-Avoidance Beliefs, Insomnia, and Spinal Degenerative Changes Pinto SM; Cheung JPY; Samartzis D; Karppinen J; Zheng YP; Pang MYC; Fortin M; Wong AYL; 40376565
SOH
2 Reappraising beliefs about losing control: An experimental investigation Fridgen CPEA; Radomsky AS; 39837217
PSYCHOLOGY
3 Further analyses of appraisals of losing control and other OCD-related cognitions: A quasi-experimental investigation Sandstrom A; Radomsky AS; 39626976
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Update and validation of the Beliefs about Losing Control Inventory-II (BALCI-II): a psychometric investigation Kelly-Turner K; Radomsky AS; 39373713
PSYCHOLOGY
5 What's control got to do with it? A systematic review of control beliefs in obsessive-compulsive disorder Sandstrom A; Krause S; Ouellet-Courtois C; Kelly-Turner K; Radomsky AS; 38091769
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Beliefs about losing control and other OCD-related cognitions: An experimental investigation Sandstrom A; Radomsky AS; 37948951
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Weight bias internalization and beliefs about the causes of obesity among the Canadian public Vida Forouhar 37620795
HKAP
8 Always Saying the Wrong Thing: Negative Beliefs About Losing Control Cause Symptoms of Social Anxiety Kelly-Turner K; Radomsky AS; 36117751
PSYCHOLOGY
9 The fear of losing control Adam S Radomsky 36113905
PSYCHOLOGY
10 Group-based trajectories and predictors of adherence to physical distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic MacNeil S; Deschênes S; Knäuper B; Carrese-Chacra E; Dialahy IZ; Suh S; Durif F; Gouin JP; 34951559
PSYCHOLOGY
11 Development and validation of the multidimensional version of the Fear of Self Questionnaire: Corrupted, culpable and malformed feared possible selves in obsessive-compulsive and body-dysmorphic symptoms. Aardema F, Radomsky AS, Moulding R, Wong SF, Bourguignon L, Giraldo-O'Meara M 33547834
PSYCHOLOGY
12 Socio-demographic, social, cognitive, and emotional correlates of adherence to physical distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic: a cross-sectional study. Gouin JP, MacNeil S, Switzer A, Carrese-Chacra E, Durif F, Knäuper B 33464556
CONCORDIA
13 Infants Generalize Beliefs Across Individuals. Burnside K, Neumann C, Poulin-Dubois D 33071864
PSYCHOLOGY
14 Theory of mind development: State of the science and future directions. Poulin-Dubois D 32859285
PSYCHOLOGY
15 Beliefs about losing control, obsessions, and caution: An experimental investigation. Gagné JP, Radomsky AS 32045733
PSYCHOLOGY
16 Editorial: Development of Student Understanding: Focus on Science Education. Kalman CS, Lattery M 31920884
PHYSICS
17 Infants attribute false beliefs to a toy crane Burnside K; Severdija V; Poulin-Dubois D; 31309631
CRDH

 

Title:Infants attribute false beliefs to a toy crane
Authors:Burnside KSeverdija VPoulin-Dubois D
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31309631/
DOI:10.1111/desc.12887
Publication:Developmental science
Keywords:agencyfalse beliefinfancytheory of mindviolation-of-expectation
PMID:31309631 Category:Dev Sci Date Added:2019-08-07
Dept Affiliation: CRDH
1 Centre for Research in Human Development, Concordia University, Montréal, Canada.

Description:

The mentalistic view of early theory of mind posits that infants possess a robust and sophisticated understanding of false belief that is masked by the demands of traditional explicit tasks. Much of the evidence supporting this mentalistic view comes from infants' looking time at events that violate their expectations about the beliefs of a human agent. We conducted a replication of the violation-of-expectation procedure, except that the human agent was replaced by an inanimate agent. Infants watched a toy crane repeatedly move toward a box containing an object. In the absence of the crane, the object changed location. When the crane returned, 16-month-old infants looked longer when it turned toward the object's new location, consistent with the attribution of a false belief to the crane. These results suggest that infants spontaneously attribute false beliefs to inanimate agents. A video abstract of this article can be viewed at https://youtu.be/qqEPPhd9FDo.





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