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id title description date_created date_modified date_published original_publication_date publication_doi provider is_published reviews_state version is_latest_version preprint_doi license tags_list tags_data contributors_list contributors_data first_author subjects_list subjects_data download_url has_coi conflict_of_interest_statement has_data_links has_prereg_links prereg_links prereg_link_info last_updated
cpd7u_v1 Six-Year-Olds Use an Intuitive Theory of Attention to Infer What Others See, Whom to Trust, and What They Want Understanding the relationship between seeing and knowing is fundamental to social cognition. While research demonstrates that even infants grasp basic aspects of this relationship, prior work often treats perceptual access and knowledge as equivalent (e.g., "if you see it, you know it"). In reality, their connection is richer: more complex objects require longer to encode, and agents’ looking patterns often reveal how well they have encoded something and how much they want it. Across three experiments, we investigated whether children understand these nuances. In Experiment 1, we found that by age six, children expect more objects to require longer looking times. In Experiment 2, children inferred that agents who looked longer were more likely to form accurate representations of what they observed. In Experiment 3, children reasoned that agents who looked longer at an object were more likely to want it. Together, these findings suggest that by age six, children develop an intuitive theory of attention, enabling them to make sophisticated inferences about others' mental states based on looking behaviors. 2025-05-10T21:57:36.619472 2025-05-10T22:00:42.571229 2025-05-10T22:00:13.358796     psyarxiv 1 pending 1 1 https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/cpd7u_v1 CC-By Attribution 4.0 International Cognitive Development; Social Cognition; Social Inference; Theory of Mind ["Cognitive Development", "Social Cognition", "Social Inference", "Theory of Mind"] Rui Zhang; Marlene Berke; Julian Jara-Ettinger [{"id": "b4zne", "name": "Rui Zhang", "index": 0, "orcid": "0009-0002-6292-3305", "bibliographic": true}, {"id": "h2t8d", "name": "Marlene Berke", "index": 1, "orcid": null, "bibliographic": true}, {"id": "cehzg", "name": "Julian Jara-Ettinger", "index": 2, "orcid": "0000-0002-6167-1647", "bibliographic": true}] Rui Zhang Social and Behavioral Sciences; Developmental Psychology [{"id": "5b4e7425c6983001430b6c1e", "text": "Social and Behavioral Sciences"}, {"id": "5b4e7425c6983001430b6c2d", "text": "Developmental Psychology"}] https://osf.io/download/681fcbd9343b8ec55d7a1b82 0   no available ["https://osf.io/29mby/?view_only=253d27598fde495db9439c2836388307", "https://osf.io/7qmx2/?view_only=e2d3efe30bc74e398904e6a77e7f1eca", "https://osf.io/6rnfz/?view_only=d1fc20c5cc8d415b9b7dfe46dd7a82f0"] prereg_both 2025-05-11T00:11:37.459027
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