Implication Of False Belief Experiments - IELTS Reading Answers & Explanations
From IELTS Recent Actual Test 5 Academic Reading Test 6 · Part 2 · Questions 14–26
Reading Passage
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
Implication of False Belief Experiments
A A considerable amount of research since the mid-1980s has been concerned with what has been termed children's theory of mind. This involves children's ability to understand that people can have different beliefs and representations of the world—a capacity that is shown by four years of age. Furthermore, this ability appears to be absent in children with autism. The ability to work out what another person is thinking is clearly an important aspect of both cognitive and social development. Furthermore, one important explanation for autism is that children suffering from this condition do not have a theory of mind (TOM). Consequently, the development of children's TOM has attracted considerable attention.
B Wimmer and Perner devised a “false belief task” to address this question. They used some toys to act out the following story. Maxi left some chocolate in a blue cupboard before he went out. When he was away his mother moved the chocolate to a green cupboard. Children were asked to predict where Maxi will look for his chocolate when he returns. Most children under four years gave the incorrect answer, that Maxi will look in the green cupboard. Those over four years tended to give the correct answer, that Maxi will look in the blue cupboard. The incorrect answers indicated that the younger children did not understand that Maxi's beliefs and representations no longer matched the actual state of the world, and they failed to appreciate that Maxi will act on the basis of his beliefs rather than the way that the world is actually organised.
C A simpler version of the Maxi task was devised by Baron-Cohen to take account of criticisms that younger children may have been affected by the complexity and too much information of the story in the task described above. For example, the child is shown two dolls, Sally and Anne, who have a basket and box, respectively. Sally also has a marble, which she places in her basket, and then leaves to take a walk. While she is out of room, Anne takes the marble from the basket, eventually putting it in the box. Sally returns, and the child is then asked where Sally will look for the marble. The child passes the task if she answers that Sally will look in the basket, where she put the marble; the child fails the task if she answers that Sally will look in the box, where the child knows the marble is hidden even though Sally cannot know, since she did not see it hidden there. In order to pass the task, the child must be able to understand that another's mental representation of the situation is different from her own, and the child must be able to predict behaviour based on that understanding. The results of research using false-belief tasks have been fairly consistent: most normally-developing children are unable to pass the tasks until around age four.
D Leslie argues that, before 18 months, children treat the world in a literal way and rarely demonstrate pretence. He also argues that it is necessary for the cognitive system to distinguish between what is pretend and what is real. If children were not able to do this, they would not be able to distinguish between imagination and what is real. Leslie suggests that this pretend play becomes possible because of the presence of a de-coupler that copies primary representations to secondary representations. For example, children, when pretending a banana is a telephone, would make a secondary representation of a banana. They would manipulate this representation and they would use their stored knowledge of “telephone” to build on this pretence.
E There is also evidence that social processes play a part in the development of TOM. Meins and her colleagues have found that what they term mind-mindedness in maternal speech to six-month-old infants is related to both security of attachment and to TOM abilities. Mind-mindedness involves speech that discusses infants' feelings and explains their behaviour in terms of mental states (eg “you're feeling hungry”).
F Lewis investigated older children living in extended families in Crete and Cyprus. They found that children who socially interact with more adults, who have more friends, and who have more older siblings tend to pass TOM tasks at a slightly earlier age than other children. Furthermore, because young children are more likely to talk about their thoughts and feelings with peers than with their mothers, peer interaction may provide a special impetus to the development of a TOM. A similar point has been made by Dunn, who argues that peer interaction is more likely to contain pretend play and that it is likely to be more challenging because other children, unlike adults, do not make large adaptations to the communicative needs of other children.
G In addition, there has been concern that some aspects of the TOM approach underestimate children's understanding of other people. After all, infants will point to objects apparently in an effort to change a person's direction of gaze and interest; they can interact quite effectively with other people; they will express their ideas in opposition to the wishes of others; and they will show empathy for the feelings of others. All these suggest that they have some level of understanding that their own thoughts are different from those in another person's mind. Evidence to support this position comes from a variety of sources. When a card with a different picture on each side is shown to a child and an adult sitting opposite her, the three-year-old understands that she see a different picture to that seen by the adult.
H Schatz studied the spontaneous speech of three-year-olds and found that these children used mental terms, and used them in circumstances where there was a contrast between, for example, not being sure where an object was located and finding it or between pretending and reality. Thus the social abilities of children indicate that they are aware of the difference between mental states and external reality at ages younger than four.
I A different explanation has been put forward by Harris. He proposed that children use “simulation”. This involves putting yourself in the other person's position, and then trying to predict what the other person would do. Thus success on false belief tasks can be explained by children trying to imagine what they would do if they were a character in the stories, rather than children being able to appreciate the beliefs of other people. Such thinking about situations that do not exist involves what is termed counterfactual reasoning.
Questions
Questions 14–20 Matching Features
Look at the following statements and the list of researchers below.
Match each statement with the correct researcher, A-G.
A. Baron-Cohen
B. Meins
C. Wimmer and Perner
D. Lewis
E. Dunn
F. Schatz
G. Harris
Questions 21–26 Summary Completion
Complete the summary below.
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
In 1980s, research studies were designed to test the subject called Theory of Mind that if children have the ability to represent the reality. First experiments were carried out on this subject on a boy. And questions had been made on where the boy can find the location of the 21. But it was accused that it had excessive 22. So second modified experiment was conducted involving two dolls, and most children passed the test at the age of 23. Then Lewis and Dunn researched 24 children in a certain place, and found children who have more interaction such as more conversation with 25 actually have better performance in the test, and peer interaction is 26 because of consisting pretending elements.
Answers & Explanations Summary
| # | Answer | Evidence | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q14 | G | A different explanation has been put forward by Harris. He proposed that children use “simulation”. This involves putting yourself in the other person's position, and then trying to predict what the other person would do. Thus success on false belief tasks can be explained by children trying to imagine what they would do if they were a character in the stories, rather than children being able to appreciate the beliefs of other people | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that Harris shared a new idea. This idea is that children use 'simulation', which means they pretend to be the other person and guess what that person would do. So, when children do well on tasks that test their understanding of others, it's because they imagine what they themselves would do if they were in the story, not because they truly understand what the other person believes. Answer Explanation: The answer is G, which refers to the researcher Harris. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is G because the passage states that Harris offered a different idea about how children think. He suggested that children might not truly understand what another person believes. Instead, they imagine what they themselves would do in the same situation. This is called 'simulation', and it's an 'alternative explanation' for how children pass belief tasks, meaning it's a different reason than just understanding others' beliefs. |
| Q15 | F | Schatz studied the spontaneous speech of three-year-olds and found that these children used mental terms, and used them in circumstances where there was a contrast between, for example, not being sure where an object was located and finding it or between pretending and reality. Thus the social abilities of children indicate that they are aware of the difference between mental states and external reality at ages younger than four | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that Schatz looked at how three-year-old children talked. Schatz found that these young children used words about thoughts, distinguishing between things like not knowing where something is (a mental state) and actually finding it (reality), or between pretending and what is real. This shows that children know the difference between their thoughts and the real world even when they are younger than four years old. Answer Explanation: The answer, F, means that the researcher named Schatz is the one who found that young children, under a certain age (three years old), can understand the difference between what is real and what is just a thought or idea in their mind. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is Schatz because the passage states that Schatz studied young children and discovered they could differentiate between 'mental states' (thoughts, not sure where an object is) and 'external reality' (what is real, finding the object). This directly matches the idea of 'telling the difference between reality and mentality'. Specifically, the text mentions that three-year-olds were 'aware of the difference between mental states and external reality'. |
| Q16 | C | Most children under four years gave the incorrect answer, that Maxi will look in the green cupboard. Those over four years tended to give the correct answer, that Maxi will look in the blue cupboard. The incorrect answers indicated that the younger children did not understand that Maxi's beliefs and representations no longer matched the actual state of the world, and they failed to appreciate that Maxi will act on the basis of his beliefs rather than the way that the world is actually organised | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that most children younger than four years old gave the wrong answer in the experiment. This showed that these young children did not understand that what someone thinks (Maxi's beliefs) was different from what was truly happening in the world. They couldn't understand that Maxi would act based on what he believed, not on how things really were. Answer Explanation: The answer is option C, which refers to 'Wimmer and Perner'. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is Wimmer and Perner because the passage describes an experiment they conducted, called a 'false belief task'. This experiment aimed to see if young children could understand that others might have different beliefs. The experiment showed that children under four years old often gave the wrong answer. This wrong answer led Wimmer and Perner to conclude that these younger children didn't understand that what someone believes might not be the same as 'the actual state of the world'. They failed to see that Maxi would act based on his own belief, not on how things really were. |
| Q17 | D | Lewis investigated older children living in extended families in Crete and Cyprus. They found that children who socially interact with more adults, who have more friends, and who have more older siblings tend to pass TOM tasks at a slightly earlier age than other children | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that Lewis studied children and saw that kids who spent more time talking and playing with adults, had more friends, or had older brothers and sisters, learned to do the 'Theory of Mind' tests a little bit faster than other kids. Answer Explanation: The answer is D, which means the researcher Lewis found this information. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is Lewis because the passage states that Lewis and his team found that children who spent more time with adults passed the 'Theory of Mind' (TOM) tests, which are the 'false belief tasks' mentioned earlier, at a younger age. This means they found the test easier compared to other children. The phrase 'socially interact with more adults' in the passage means 'get along with adults often', and 'pass TOM tasks at a slightly earlier age' means 'got through the test more easily'. |
| Q18 | A | A simpler version of the Maxi task was devised by Baron-Cohen to take account of criticisms that younger children may have been affected by the complexity and too much information of the story in the task described above | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that Baron-Cohen made a simpler task. He did this because some people thought the first task was too complex and had too much information, which made it hard for young children to understand. Answer Explanation: The answer is Baron-Cohen. This researcher made a simpler test because the old one was too hard for young children. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is Baron-Cohen because the passage states that he created an easier version of a task. He did this to address concerns that the first task might have been too complicated or had too much information, which could confuse younger children. This matches the idea of 'revising an easier experiment to rule out the possibility that children might be influenced by sophisticated reasoning' (or complexity). Pay attention to keywords like 'simpler version,' 'devised,' and 'complexity.' |
| Q19 | B | Meins and her colleagues have found that what they term mind-mindedness in maternal speech to six-month-old infants is related to both security of attachment and to TOM abilities | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that Meins and her group discovered that how mothers talk to their six-month-old babies, especially when they talk about feelings and thoughts (called 'mind-mindedness'), is linked to how well those babies get attached to their mothers and also to their ability to understand what others are thinking (TOM abilities). Answer Explanation: The answer is B, which refers to the researcher Meins. Meins is the correct answer because her research connected how mothers talk to their babies with the babies' ability to understand others' minds. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is B because the passage states that Meins and her team researched a social factor called 'mind-mindedness' in mothers' speech to infants. They found this type of 'maternal speech' (mother-child communication) was connected to the development of 'TOM abilities' (capability in Theory of Mind). This directly matches the idea presented in the question. |
| Q20 | E | Furthermore, because young children are more likely to talk about their thoughts and feelings with peers than with their mothers, peer interaction may provide a special impetus to the development of a TOM. A similar point has been made by Dunn, who argues that peer interaction is more likely to contain pretend play and that it is likely to be more challenging because other children, unlike adults, do not make large adaptations to the communicative needs of other children | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that young children share their ideas and feelings more with their friends (peers) than with their mothers. This kind of talking with friends helps them develop an understanding of other people's minds. It then says that Dunn made a similar suggestion, explaining that talking with friends often involves fun pretend play and is harder because friends do not change their way of talking to make it easier for other children, unlike adults who often do. Answer Explanation: The answer means that a researcher named Dunn talked about how children communicate differently with their friends compared to their mothers. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is Dunn because the passage states that children are 'more likely to talk about their thoughts and feelings with peers than with their mothers,' and then explicitly says, 'A similar point has been made by Dunn'. This connects the idea that children are more interactive with friends (peers) than mothers directly to Dunn's research or observations. |
| Q21 | chocolate | Maxi left some chocolate in a blue cupboard before he went out. When he was away his mother moved the chocolate to a green cupboard. Children were asked to predict where Maxi will look for his chocolate when he returns | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that in the first experiment, a boy named Maxi put his 'chocolate' in a blue cupboard. While he was gone, his mother moved the 'chocolate' to a green cupboard. Then, kids were asked to guess where Maxi would search for his 'chocolate' when he came back. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'chocolate'. This word refers to a sweet food item, often brown, that Maxi had in the story. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'chocolate' because the passage describes the first experiment, known as the 'Maxi task'. In this experiment, a boy named Maxi leaves his 'chocolate' in a cupboard. The children in the study were asked to guess where Maxi would look for his chocolate. The question in the summary specifically asks about 'where the boy can find the location of the' an item, and the passage clearly states Maxi's chocolate was the item in question in this early experiment. |
| Q22 | information | A simpler version of the Maxi task was devised by Baron-Cohen to take account of criticisms that younger children may have been affected by the complexity and too much information of the story in the task described above | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that Baron-Cohen made an easier version of a task because people said that young children might have had trouble with the first task. This was because the story was 'too complex' and had 'too much information'. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'information'. This means that the first experiment was criticized because it had too much information, making it hard for younger children. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer 'information' is directly stated in the passage as a criticism of the first experiment. The passage explains that the Maxi task was too complex and had 'too much information', which might have affected younger children's ability to complete it. Therefore, a simpler version was created. |
| Q23 | four | The results of research using false-belief tasks have been fairly consistent: most normally-developing children are unable to pass the tasks until around age four | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that tests about understanding what others think show similar results: most children who are developing usually cannot pass these tests until they are about four years old. Answer Explanation: The answer 'four' means that many children, who are growing up normally, start to successfully complete the special tasks designed to test their understanding of what other people are thinking when they are around four years old. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'four' because the passage explicitly states the age at which most children typically pass the false-belief tasks, which are used to measure the Theory of Mind. The passage mentions that children cannot pass these tasks until about this age, meaning they start passing them at this point. |
| Q24 | older | Lewis investigated older children living in extended families in Crete and Cyprus | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that a person named Lewis looked into the lives of children who were not babies, but a few years old, and lived with their big families in places called Crete and Cyprus. Answer Explanation: The answer 'older' means that Lewis and Dunn studied children who were not very young, but a bit more grown up. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'older' because the passage states that Lewis studied 'older children' in specific locations. This shows that the research mentioned in the summary was conducted on children who were not infants or toddlers, but a bit more mature. |
| Q25 | adults | Lewis investigated older children living in extended families in Crete and Cyprus. They found that children who socially interact with more adults, who have more friends, and who have more older siblings tend to pass TOM tasks at a slightly earlier age than other children | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage talks about a study by Lewis. It found that children who talked and played with more grown-up people ('adults') did better on the tests for understanding other people's minds. These children passed the tests when they were a little younger than other children. Answer Explanation: The answer, 'adults', means grown-up people. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'adults' because the passage mentions Lewis's research, which found that children who talk to and spend time with more grown-ups, or 'adults', tend to do better on the Theory of Mind tests at a younger age. This directly answers the part of the summary about children having 'more conversation with' a certain group and performing better. |
| Q26 | challenging | A similar point has been made by Dunn, who argues that peer interaction is more likely to contain pretend play and that it is likely to be more challenging because other children, unlike adults, do not make large adaptations to the communicative needs of other children | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that playing and talking with other kids is often harder because kids don't change how they talk to help their friends understand, unlike grown-ups. This makes the interactions more difficult, or 'challenging'. Answer Explanation: The answer 'challenging' means that interacting with other children can be difficult or make you think hard. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'challenging' because the passage explains that peer interaction, or talking and playing with other children, is more challenging than with adults. This is because other children do not change how they communicate to make it easier for their friends, especially when they are doing pretend play. This 'challenging' nature is believed to help children develop their 'theory of mind' because it makes them think more about what others are thinking. |
