The article below may contain offensive and/or incorrect content.
Perspective taking—the ability to see things from someone else's point of view—can boost success in communication. A signaler might take perspective when designing an utterance that is informative from the receiver's point of view, or the receiver might take perspective when inferring the signaler's communicative intentions. Perspective taking is supposed to play a particularly vital role when people try to communicate in the absence of a conventional signaling system. However, the task demands in such cases are extremely different from those in typical experimental approaches to perspective taking. Thus, current evidence for perspective taking does not establish whether humans can take perspective in those cases where perspective taking is arguably most helpful. We describe experimental tests of perspective taking that are suitable for settling the matter. Our task focuses on the use of shared world knowledge rather than shared visual scenes, and it is suitable for both open-ended and contextually constrained responses. We show that people generally fail at perspective taking in a novel signaling task, but that perspective taking can be boosted by contextual constraint. In that case, however, it is context, rather than perspective taking or shared world knowledge, that explains communicative success. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved)





Departments
Authors
Libraries
Current Articles
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: How the Brain Paralyzes You While You Sleep
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Getting Romantic at Home Wearing an EEG Cap
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Compound Protects Myelin and Nerve Fibers
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Disagreeing Takes up a Lot of Brain Real Estate
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: High Insulin Levels During Childhood a Risk for Mental Health Problems in Adulthood
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Memory May Be Preserved in Condition With Brain Changes Similar to Alzheimer’s Disease
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: MIND and Mediterranean Diets Associated With Later Onset of Parkinson’s Disease
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Scientific Meeting » NIMH Livestream Event: Managing Stress and Anxiety
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: A third of Americans don't see systemic racism as a barrier to good health
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: What brain imaging tells us about decluttering our minds
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: BRAIN INITIATIVE TOOLMAKERS NEWSLETTER
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Rotten Egg Gas Could Guard Against Alzheimer’s Disease
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Mothers, but Not Fathers, With Multiple Children Report More Fragmented Sleep
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Gut Microbes May Antagonize or Assist in Anorexia
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: SARS_CoV_2 Can Infect Neurons and Damage Brain Tissue
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Cats May Help Increase Empathy and Decrease Anxiety for Kids With Autism
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: SCGB launches Bridge to Independence (BTI) Award
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Mindfulness Can Improve Mental Health and Wellbeing, but It’s Unlikely to Work for Everyone
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: A Workflow Algorithm to Predict Psychosis
- Article Correctness Is Author's Responsibility: Brain Circuit That Encodes Timing of Events Identified