The main aim of this thesis was to investigate children's reasoning abilities,
especially their ability to solve counterfactual tasks. This thesis studied counterfactual
thinking as an independent ability but also in relation to both types of the false belief
tasks that measure theory of mind and contrary-to-fact syllogisms. Four experiments
were conducted with typically developing children between the ages of 3 to 5. The first
experiment studied the difference between affirmative and negative counterfactual
questions and found that the former was easier than the latter. The second
experiment replicated these results and investigated the link between counterfactual
thinking and the false belief task but failed to find a link between the two. The third
experiment found a link between counterfactual and both types of false belief tasks;
false belief to others and false belief to self task. This experiment also identified a
discrepancy between counterfactual thinking and contrary-to-fact syllogisms. When
examining contrary-to-fact syllogisms it was found that the ones requiring a yes
answer were easier than the ones requiring a no answer. This discrepancy between
counterfactual thinking and contrary-to-fact syllogisms was confirmed in experiment 4
as a fantasy context influenced performance on these tasks differently. Fantasy
context increased performance on contrary-to-fact syllogisms but decreased
performance on counterfactual tasks.
In conclusion, this thesis confirmed a link between counterfactual thinking and the
false belief task. It identified an important difference between counterfactual thinking
and contrary-to-fact reasoning. It also highlighted the importance of the polarity
(affirmative versus negative) of questions as well as answers on performance.
Date of Award | 2007 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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COUNTERFACTUAL THINKING AND THE FALSE BELIEF TASK: A DEVELOPMENTAL STUDY
ARRECKX, F. (Author). 2007
Student thesis: PhD