RuCCS Students
RuCCS People
RuCCS Colloquia
RuCCS Students
RuCCS People
RuCCS Colloquia
previous arrow
next arrow
PlayPause

Welcome to the Rutgers Center for Cognitive Science

The role of inhibition in belief-desire reasoning

Ori Friedman

Thursday, February 06, 2003, 12:00pm - 07:00pm

Rutgers University, Center for Cognitive Science

Copy to My Calendar (iCal) Download as iCal file

The role of inhibition in belief-desire reasoning
Feb 06
   Ori Friedman    (Rutgers University, Center for Cognitive Science)

Abstract:

What is the relationship between performance on belief-desire reasoning tasks, such as the false belief task, and inhibitory processing? In this talk I review the two most detailed models of this relationship: the Inhibition of Inhibition Model and the Inhibition of Return Model. I then present a series of experiment conducted on children and adults that test between these two models. Findings from children reveal a new bias in belief-desire reasoning, and support the Inhibition of Inhibition model. Findings from adults reveal a different bias, and are consistent with the Inhibition of Return Model.

Thus, the findings are consistent with both models, but at different developmental points. The findings suggest a developmental shift in the role that inhibitory processing plays in belief-desire reasoning.

Ori Friedman

About RuCCS

News Channel

Spinning loader

Upcoming Events