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Social Cognition, joint attention and communicative Competence from 9 to 15 months of age

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TLDR
It was found that two measures--the amount of time infants spent in joint engagement with their mothers and the degree to which mothers used language that followed into their infant's focus of attention--predicted infants' earliest skills of gestural and linguistic communication.
Abstract
At around 1 year of age, human infants display a number of new behaviors that seem to indicate a newly emerging understanding of other persons as intentional beings whose attention to outside objects may be shared, followed into, and directed in various ways. These behaviors have mostly been studied separately. In the current study, we investigated the most important of these behaviors together as they emerged in a single group of 24 infants between 9 and 15 months of age. At each of seven monthly visits, we measured joint attentional engagement, gaze and point following, imitation of two different kinds of actions on objects, imperative and declarative gestures, and comprehension and production of language. We also measured several nonsocial-cognitive skills as a point of comparison. We report two studies. The focus of the first study was the initial emergence of infants' social-cognitive skills and how these skills are related to one another developmentally. We found a reliable pattern of emergence: Infants progressed from sharing to following to directing others' attention and behavior. The nonsocial skills did not emerge predictably in this developmental sequence. Furthermore, correlational analyses showed that the ages of emergence of all pairs of the social-cognitive skills or their components were inter-related. The focus of the second study was the social interaction of infants and their mothers, especially with regard to their skills of joint attentional engagement (including mothers' use of language to follow into or direct infants' attention) and how these skills related to infants' early communicative competence. Our measures of communicative competence included not only language production, as in previous studies, but also language comprehension and gesture production. It was found that two measures--the amount of time infants spent in joint engagement with their mothers and the degree to which mothers used language that followed into their infant's focus of attention--predicted infants' earliest skills of gestural and linguistic communication. Results of the two studies are discussed in terms of their implications for theories of social-cognitive development, for theories of language development, and for theories of the process by means of which human children become fully participating members of the cultural activities and processes into which they are born.

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Understanding and sharing intentions: The origins of cultural cognition

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Empathy: Its ultimate and proximate bases.

TL;DR: The Perception-Action Model (PAM), together with an understanding of how representations change with experience, can explain the major empirical effects in the literature and can also predict a variety of empathy disorders.
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Development and neurophysiology of mentalizing.

TL;DR: The mentalizing (theory of mind) system of the brain is probably in operation from 18 months of age, allowing implicit attribution of intentions and other mental states, and from this age children are able to explain the misleading reasons that have given rise to a false belief.
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How social contexts support and shape language development

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The social brain in adolescence

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References
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Book

Understanding other minds : perspectives from autism

TL;DR: The theory-of-minds hypothesis of autism has been studied extensively in the literature as mentioned in this paper, with a focus on the role of imitation in understanding persons and developing a theory of mind evolving over time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Taking the intentional stance at 12 months of age

TL;DR: A habituation study indicating that 12-month-old infants can take the "intentional stance" in interpreting the goal-directed spatial behavior of a rational agent and indicates that infants of this age are able to evaluate the rationality of the agent's goal- directed actions, which is a necessary requirement for applying the intentional stance.
Journal Article

The Acquisition of Performatives Prior to Speech.

TL;DR: The authors examined the onset of intentional communication before speech, and traced it to the very first uses of speech, focusing on the cognitive and social developments that prepare the child for the discovery of communication.
Journal ArticleDOI

Folk Psychology as Simulation

TL;DR: The authors discuss la nature of the psychologie populaire (folk psychology) and examine, dans cette optique, le raisonnement hypothetico-deductif, ainsi que sur le probleme de l'attribution des croyances.
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