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Serena Lecce

Researcher at University of Pavia

Publications -  76
Citations -  1983

Serena Lecce is an academic researcher from University of Pavia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Theory of mind & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 65 publications receiving 1472 citations.

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Longitudinal effects of theory of mind on later peer relations: the role of prosocial behavior.

TL;DR: Following children across the transition to primary school supported the authors' mediational hypothesis of indirect paths from early theory of mind to subsequently lower peer rejection and higher peer acceptance, via improvements in prosocial behavior.
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Promoting theory of mind during middle childhood: a training program.

TL;DR: A conversation-based training program for 9- and 10-year-olds showed significantly greater gains in ToM than the control group; this contrast was stable over 2 months, and (in a subsample) the improvement was independent of any changes in executive functions.
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Does sensitivity to criticism mediate the relationship between theory of mind and academic achievement

TL;DR: Mediation analyses showed that, independent of verbal ability and social skills, sensitivity to criticism at Time 2 mediated the association between theory of mind at Time 1 and academic achievement at Time 3.
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Theory of Mind in aging: Comparing cognitive and affective components in the faux pas test.

TL;DR: The view of selective age-related differences on cognitive, but not affective, ToM in normal aging is supported by a dissociable pattern of correlations with executive functions.
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Reading Minds: The Relation Between Children’s Mental State Knowledge and Their Metaknowledge About Reading

TL;DR: A significant relation between early cognitive (but not emotion) mental state knowledge and later metaknowledge about reading is shown and close links between different aspects of children's knowledge about the mind are suggested.