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The social dimension of mindreading : developmental evidence for the role of social categorization during utterance interpretation

Ronderos, Camilo R. LU orcid ; Iversen, Rebecca ; Noveck, Ira and Falkum, Ingrid (2025) In Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences 380(1932).
Abstract

Work in developmental pragmatics has shown that even though infants display refined mindreading abilities, older children struggle to understand language phenomena that rely on mindreading. This apparent mismatch might be partially explained by considering children's growing sensitivity to social categories such as their interlocutor's age. Based on recent work in philosophy of mind, we investigated how social categorization relates to children's developing mindreading abilities during language comprehension. We tested the hypothesis that social-category-based reasoning follows a similar developmental trajectory to that typically described for children's mindreading skills. In a picture-selection task, Norwegian participants (ages 3-9... (More)

Work in developmental pragmatics has shown that even though infants display refined mindreading abilities, older children struggle to understand language phenomena that rely on mindreading. This apparent mismatch might be partially explained by considering children's growing sensitivity to social categories such as their interlocutor's age. Based on recent work in philosophy of mind, we investigated how social categorization relates to children's developing mindreading abilities during language comprehension. We tested the hypothesis that social-category-based reasoning follows a similar developmental trajectory to that typically described for children's mindreading skills. In a picture-selection task, Norwegian participants (ages 3-9 years, N = 119) made decisions regarding a speaker's (child or adult) preferences by choosing between images showing stereotypically child-coded and adult-coded items. Young children preferentially selected the child-coded image regardless of the speaker's age, while older children selected the stereotypically adult-coded image when they heard the adult speaker. Additionally, we found no evidence that participants' performance in the picture-selection task was causally predicted by their scores on a standard false-belief task. We interpret these results as suggesting that the use of social categorization skills during utterance interpretation describes a similar developmental trajectory to that typically described for mindreading abilities, but is likely independent from false-belief reasoning. We argue that future studies in developmental pragmatics should consider social category differences between participants and speakers when drawing conclusions about children's mindreading abilities and how these are reflected in their interpretation of verbal utterances.This article is part of the theme issue 'At the heart of human communication: new views on the complex relationship between pragmatics and Theory of Mind'.

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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
experimental pragmatics, developmental pragmatics, social categorization, mindreading, Theory of Mind
in
Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences
volume
380
issue
1932
article number
20230493
pages
13 pages
publisher
Royal Society Publishing
external identifiers
  • pmid:40808458
ISSN
1471-2970
DOI
10.1098/rstb.2023.0493
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
5125b5f0-51cf-483e-9171-50f64b7eceec
date added to LUP
2025-08-21 10:26:41
date last changed
2025-08-26 09:28:44
@article{5125b5f0-51cf-483e-9171-50f64b7eceec,
  abstract     = {{<p>Work in developmental pragmatics has shown that even though infants display refined mindreading abilities, older children struggle to understand language phenomena that rely on mindreading. This apparent mismatch might be partially explained by considering children's growing sensitivity to social categories such as their interlocutor's age. Based on recent work in philosophy of mind, we investigated how social categorization relates to children's developing mindreading abilities during language comprehension. We tested the hypothesis that social-category-based reasoning follows a similar developmental trajectory to that typically described for children's mindreading skills. In a picture-selection task, Norwegian participants (ages 3-9 years, N = 119) made decisions regarding a speaker's (child or adult) preferences by choosing between images showing stereotypically child-coded and adult-coded items. Young children preferentially selected the child-coded image regardless of the speaker's age, while older children selected the stereotypically adult-coded image when they heard the adult speaker. Additionally, we found no evidence that participants' performance in the picture-selection task was causally predicted by their scores on a standard false-belief task. We interpret these results as suggesting that the use of social categorization skills during utterance interpretation describes a similar developmental trajectory to that typically described for mindreading abilities, but is likely independent from false-belief reasoning. We argue that future studies in developmental pragmatics should consider social category differences between participants and speakers when drawing conclusions about children's mindreading abilities and how these are reflected in their interpretation of verbal utterances.This article is part of the theme issue 'At the heart of human communication: new views on the complex relationship between pragmatics and Theory of Mind'. </p>}},
  author       = {{Ronderos, Camilo R. and Iversen, Rebecca and Noveck, Ira and Falkum, Ingrid}},
  issn         = {{1471-2970}},
  keywords     = {{experimental pragmatics; developmental pragmatics; social categorization; mindreading; Theory of Mind}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{08}},
  number       = {{1932}},
  publisher    = {{Royal Society Publishing}},
  series       = {{Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences}},
  title        = {{The social dimension of mindreading : developmental evidence for the role of social categorization during utterance interpretation}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2023.0493}},
  doi          = {{10.1098/rstb.2023.0493}},
  volume       = {{380}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}