4.4 Article

The Castaway Island: Distinct Roles of Theory of Mind and Technical Reasoning in Cumulative Technological Culture

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL
Volume 149, Issue 1, Pages 58-66

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/xge0000614

Keywords

cumulative technological culture; theory of mind; technical reasoning; social learning

Funding

  1. ANR (Agence Nationale pour la Recherche
  2. Project Cognition and tool-use economy ECOTOOL) [ANR-14-CE30-0015-01]
  3. Universite de Lyon [ANR-11-LABX-0042, ANR-11-IDEX-0007]

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Cumulative technological culture is an intriguing phenomenon whose cognitive bases remain a matter of debate. For the influential shared-intentionality theory, this phenomenon originates in theory-of-mind skills. Evidence challenges it, stressing the role of learners' technical-reasoning skills. This discrepancy might be explained by a more specific role of theory-of-mind skills, notably in situations where the teacher communicates with the learner without visual access to what the latter is doing. We tested this hypothesis using a microsociety paradigm where participants (n = 200) had to build the highest possible tower in 2 conditions: Monitoring (communication with visual access) and Blind (communication without visual access). We also assessed participants' theory-of-mind and technical-reasoning skills. Results indicated that learners' technical-reasoning skills predicted cumulative performance in both conditions, whereas teachers' theory-of-mind skills were involved only in the Blind condition. These findings confirm the distinct but complementary roles of theory-of-mind and technical-reasoning skills in cumulative technological culture.

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