Young Children Understand That Looking Leads to Knowing (So Long as They Are Looking into a Single Barrel)
- 1 August 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Child Development
- Vol. 61 (4) , 973-982
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8624.1990.tb02835.x
Abstract
3 experiments were conducted to investigate the claim made by Wimmer, Hogrefe, and Perner that 3-4-year-old children do not understand that people gain knowledge about something by looking at it. The first experiment involved a simple forced-choice procedure in which children had to judge which of 2 assistants knew what was inside a box when one of the assistants had looked inside and the other had lifted it up. In this experiment, the children did realize that the assistant who had looked in the box knew its contents. The second experiment followed the Wimmer et al. procedure, but with a simpler question form. The children were just asked to state whether someone knew what was in the box. Again, the children were able to work out that a person who had looked in a box knew what was inside it. In the third experiment, a direct comparison was made between the simple question and the more complex, double-barreled question asked by Wimmer et al. The children found the more complex question considerably harder. The results of these experiments suggest that, in contrast to the claims made by Wimmer et al., 3- and 4-year-old children do understand that looking leads to knowing, and that their difficulty in the Wimmer et al, study was mainly with the form of the question that they were asked.This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Early understanding of perception as a source of knowledgeJournal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1989
- Young children's reasoning about beliefsCognition, 1988
- Knowledge for hunger: Children's problem with representation in imputing mental statesCognition, 1988
- Children's Understanding of Informational Access as Source of KnowledgeChild Development, 1988
- Children's Understanding of Representational Change and Its Relation to the Understanding of False Belief and the Appearance-Reality DistinctionChild Development, 1988
- Ignorance versus False Belief: A Developmental Lag in Attribution of Epistemic StatesChild Development, 1986
- Children's Developing Conceptions of the Mind and BrainChild Development, 1982
- Developmental follow-up of infants delivered by Caesarean section and general anesthesiaInfant Behavior and Development, 1980
- The Use of Hiding Games for Studying the Coordination of ViewpointsEducational Review, 1979
- The capacity for joint visual attention in the infantNature, 1975