4.1 Article

Three-year-olds' Perspective-taking in Social Interactions: Relations with Socio-cognitive Skills

Journal

JOURNAL OF COGNITION AND DEVELOPMENT
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 537-560

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/15248372.2021.1901713

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIHCD [P01 HD064653]
  2. Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education at the University of Chicago [R305B140048]

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The study found that 3-year-old children demonstrated sensitivity to others' perspectives through implicit responses, but did not always take their partner's perspective into account in their actions. Contrary to adult findings, children who struggled to inhibit imitation showed better perspective-taking skills.
Understanding others' perspectives and integrating this knowledge in social interactions is challenging for young children; even adults struggle with this skill. While young children show the capacity to understand what others can and cannot see under supportive laboratory conditions, more research is necessary to understand how children implement their perspective-taking (PT) skill during interactions and which socio-cognitive skills support their ability to do so. This preregistered study examined children's Level 1 visual PT in a real-time social interaction and tested whether social-cognitive skills (focusing on inhibition of imitation) predicted PT. Thirty-six 3-year-old children (mean age: 37.3 months) participated in a PT task and responded implicitly (via eye gaze) and explicitly (via toy choice) to situations where their communicative partner could see some objects but not others. Three-year-olds demonstrated sensitivity to another's perspective via implicit responses, but did not consistently take their partner's perspective into account in their actions when considering objects their partner could not see. Contrary to adult findings, children who struggled to inhibit imitating (those more affected by another's actions) demonstrated better PT, again when considering objects outside their partner's sight. Thus, 3-year-olds' sensitivity to others' perspectives was robust, while acting on PT knowledge may still be developing; further, children more affected by another's actions demonstrated improved PT skills.

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