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Dive into the research topics where Annalisa Valle is active.

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Featured researches published by Annalisa Valle.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2016

Promoting Mentalizing in Pupils by Acting on Teachers: Preliminary Italian Evidence of the "Thought in Mind" Project

Annalisa Valle; Davide Massaro; Ilaria Castelli; Francesca Sangiuliano Intra; Elisabetta Lombardi; Edoardo Alfredo Bracaglia; Antonella Marchetti

Mentalization research focuses on different aspects of this topic, highlighting individual differences in mentalizing and proposing programs of intervention for children and adults to increase this ability. The “Thought in Mind Project” (TiM Project) provides training targeted to adults—teachers or parents—to increase their mentalization and, consequently, to obtain mentalization improvement in children. The present research aimed to explore for the first time ever the potential of training for teachers based on the TiM Project, regarding the enhancement of mentalizing of an adult who would have interacted as a teacher with children. For this reason, two teachers – similar for meta-cognitive and meta-emotional skills - and their classes (N = 46) were randomly assigned to the training or control condition. In the first case, the teacher participated in training on the implementation of promotion of mentalizing in everyday school teaching strategies; in the second case the teacher participated in a control activity, similar to training for scheduling and methods, but without promoting the implementation of mentalization (in both conditions two meetings lasting about 3 h at the beginning of the school year and two supervisions during the school year were conducted). The children were tested by tasks assessing several aspects of mentalization (second and third-order false belief understanding, Strange Stories, Reading the mind in the Eyes, Mentalizing Task) both before and after the teacher participate in the TiM or control training (i.e., at the beginning and at the end of the school year). The results showed that, although some measured components of mentalization progressed over time, only the TiM Project training group significantly improved in third order false belief understanding and changed - in a greater way compared to the control group – in two of the three components of the Mentalizing Task. These evidences are promising about the idea that the creation of a mentalizing community promotes the mentalization abilities of its members.


Europe’s Journal of Psychology | 2015

Theory of Mind Development in Adolescence and Early Adulthood: The Growing Complexity of Recursive Thinking Ability

Annalisa Valle; Davide Massaro; Ilaria Castelli; Antonella Marchetti

This study explores the development of theory of mind, operationalized as recursive thinking ability, from adolescence to early adulthood (N = 110; young adolescents = 47; adolescents = 43; young adults = 20). The construct of theory of mind has been operationalized in two different ways: as the ability to recognize the correct mental state of a character, and as the ability to attribute the correct mental state in order to predict the character’s behaviour. The Imposing Memory Task, with five recursive thinking levels, and a third-order false-belief task with three recursive thinking levels (devised for this study) have been used. The relationship among working memory, executive functions, and linguistic skills are also analysed. Results show that subjects exhibit less understanding of elevated recursive thinking levels (third, fourth, and fifth) compared to the first and second levels. Working memory is correlated with total recursive thinking, whereas performance on the linguistic comprehension task is related to third level recursive thinking in both theory of mind tasks. An effect of age on third-order false-belief task performance was also found. A key finding of the present study is that the third-order false-belief task shows significant age differences in the application of recursive thinking that involves the prediction of others’ behaviour. In contrast, such an age effect is not observed in the Imposing Memory Task. These results may support the extension of the investigation of the third order false belief after childhood.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2015

Mind-Reading Ability and Structural Connectivity Changes in Aging.

Monia Cabinio; Federica Rossetto; Valeria Blasi; Federica Antonia Maria Savazzi; Ilaria Castelli; Davide Massaro; Annalisa Valle; Raffaello Nemni; Mario Clerici; Antonella Marchetti; Francesca Baglio

The Mind-Reading ability through the eyes is an important component of the affective Theory of Mind (ToM), which allows people to infer the other’s mental state from the eye gaze. The aim of the present study was to investigate to which extent age-associated structural brain changes impact this ability and to determine if this association is related to executive functions in elderly subjects. For this purpose, Magnetic Resonance Imaging was used to determine both gray matter and white matter (WM) areas associated with aging. The resulting areas have been included in a subsequent correlation analysis to detect the brain regions whose structure was associated with the Mind-Reading ability through the eyes, assessed with the Italian version of the “Reading the Mind in the Eyes” (RME) test, in a sample of 36 healthy subjects ranging from 24 to 79 years of age. The analysis resulted in three important findings: (1) the performance to the RME test is relatively stable across the decades 20–70 (despite a slight decrease of this ability with aging) and independent from executive functions; (2) structural brain imaging demonstrated the involvement of a great number of cortical ToM areas for the execution of the RME test: the bilateral precentral gyrus, the bilateral posterior insula, the left superior temporal gyrus and the left inferior frontal gyrus, which also showed a significant volume decrease with age; (3) an age and task-related decline in WM connectivity on left fronto-temporal portion of the brain. Our results confirm the age-related structural modifications of the brain and show that these changes have an influence on the Mind-Reading ability through the eyes.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2015

Theory of Mind and the Whole Brain Functional Connectivity: Behavioral and Neural Evidences with the Amsterdam Resting State Questionnaire

Antonella Marchetti; Francesca Baglio; Isa Costantini; Ottavia Dipasquale; Federica Antonia Maria Savazzi; Raffaello Nemni; Francesca Sangiuliano Intra; Semira Tagliabue; Annalisa Valle; Davide Massaro; Ilaria Castelli

A topic of common interest to psychologists and philosophers is the spontaneous flow of thoughts when the individual is awake but not involved in cognitive demands. This argument, classically referred to as the “stream of consciousness” of James, is now known in the psychological literature as “Mind-Wandering.” Although of great interest, this construct has been scarcely investigated so far. Diaz et al. (2013) created the Amsterdam Resting State Questionnaire (ARSQ), composed of 27 items, distributed in seven factors: discontinuity of mind, theory of mind (ToM), self, planning, sleepiness, comfort, and somatic awareness. The present study aims at: testing psychometric properties of the ARSQ in a sample of 670 Italian subjects; exploring the neural correlates of a subsample of participants (N = 28) divided into two groups on the basis of the scores obtained in the ToM factor. Results show a satisfactory reliability of the original factional structure in the Italian sample. In the subjects with a high mean in the ToM factor compared to low mean subjects, functional MRI revealed: a network (48 nodes) with higher functional connectivity (FC) with a dominance of the left hemisphere; an increased within-lobe FC in frontal and insular lobes. In both neural and behavioral terms, our results support the idea that the mind, which does not rest even when explicitly asked to do so, has various and interesting mentalistic-like contents.


European Journal of Developmental Psychology | 2014

Do social norms, false belief understanding, and metacognitive vocabulary influence irony comprehension? A study of five- and seven-year-old children

Davide Massaro; Annalisa Valle; Antonella Marchetti

This study explores the effects of violating socially shared versus situationally defined norms on the understanding of ironic statements in 70 Italian-speaking five- and seven-year-old children. We also considered the possible relationships between irony understanding, receptive and metacognitive vocabulary, and false belief understanding. The results showed that violating socially shared norms does not benefit younger childrens understanding of irony, although it does help older childrens understanding. Ironic utterances that violate situationally defined norms were understood similarly across the two age groups. First- and second-order false belief understanding did not predict childrens ability to interpret irony, although metacognitive vocabulary did predict interpretation for the seven-year-old group in instances of violating a situationally defined norm.


Archive | 2016

Combining Development and Education: Why Do Decision-Making and Social Norms Matter for Financial Education?

Antonella Marchetti; Ilaria Castelli; Davide Massaro; Annalisa Valle

Financial education for children involves the transmission of—and contributes to modify—knowledge and behaviours in and in relation to the economic domain, in different ways at different ages. From a psychological perspective, to make financial education for young people effectively it is necessary to consider two related matters: the nature of the decision-making process and the understanding of social norms evidenced by that process’s features. Decision-making abilities can in this light be conceived as internal pre-requisites for educational interventions, and social norms as external constraints defining the contexts in which decisions are taken. After a brief overview of the main models of financial education devised by economists and psychologists in recent years, we present a review of the development of decision-making ability during childhood, focusing on the impact of social norms for our understanding of it.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2016

Social Competence in Children with Borderline Intellectual Functioning: Delayed Development of Theory of Mind Across All Complexity Levels

Gisella Baglio; Valeria Blasi; Francesca Sangiuliano Intra; Ilaria Castelli; Davide Massaro; Francesca Baglio; Annalisa Valle; Michela Zanette; Antonella Marchetti

Borderline intellectual functioning (BIF) is characterized by heterogeneous cognitive difficulties, with an intelligence quotient (IQ) between 70 and 85 points, and a failure to meet the developmental and sociocultural standards for personal independence and social responsibility required in daily life. The fact that this population still remain a marginal clinical category, with no ad hoc diagnostic and therapeutic approaches, has stimulated the present research. Our goal was to study children with BIF investigating the development of Theory of Mind (ToM) as a pillar of social competence. Children with BIF (N = 28, 16 male/12 female, and mean age 9.46 ± 1.26 years) and children with typical development (TD; N = 31, 17 male/14 female; mean age 8.94 years ± 0.99) underwent a neurocognitive assessment and a ToM assessment. Children with BIF showed a significant lower performance across all the levels of ToM development investigated compared to the control group, and a correlation between executive functions and the advanced levels of ToM reasoning. These results constitute a first step in the direction of defining the clinical profile of children with BIF concerning ToM development, opening the way to future interventions in order to support the developmental evolution of this population in an adaptive direction.


RICERCHE DI PSICOLOGIA | 2010

La consapevolezza emotiva in età scolastica: un contributo alla validazione italiana della LEAS-C

Antonella Marchetti; Ilaria Castelli; Davide Massaro; Annalisa Valle

Il presente lavoro intende fornire alcuni dati preliminari a supporto della validazione italiana della Scala di Consapevolezza Emotiva – versione bambini (LEAS-C; Bajgar et al., 2005; Lane et al., 1990). Obiettivo della scala e valutare la consapevolezza dei propri e degli altrui stati emotivi in bambini di eta scolastica. La ricerca prevede la somministrazione a 125 soggetti (suddivisi in tre gruppi a seconda della classe scolastica frequentata: terza, quarta e quinta classe della scuola primaria) della LEAS-C (della quale e stata effettuata una valutazione anche relativa alla produttivita verbale), di tre prove di empatia, di tre prove di Teoria della Mente e di due subtest linguistici della scala WISC III. I risultati evidenziano elevate affidabilita e coerenza interna della versione italiana della LEAS- C. Inoltre, la relazione riscontrata tra la performance relativa alla consapevolezza emotiva e quella riguardante una delle prove di empatia fornisce un indicatore di validita convergente, mentre la mancanza di legami tra il costrutto indagato e la Teoria della Mente e considerato un indice di validita divergente. Infine, la ricerca mette in luce un possibile trend evolutivo che vede la consapevolezza emotiva svilupparsi parallelamente all’empatia nei bambini di terza e quarta classe, per poi procedere indipendentemente nella sua evoluzione. La discussione fornisce alcune ipotesi esplicative e futuri sviluppi a questo riguardo.


Psychological Reports | 2018

Social Decision Making in Adolescents and Young Adults: Evidence From the Ultimatum Game and Cognitive Biases:

Antonella Marchetti; Francesca Baglio; Ilaria Castelli; Ludovica Griffanti; Raffaello Nemni; Federica Rossetto; Annalisa Valle; Michela Zanette; Davide Massaro

During adolescence and early adulthood, individuals deal with important developmental changes, especially in the context of complex social interactions. Previous studies demonstrated that those changes have a significant impact on the social decision making process, in terms of a progressive increase of intentionality comprehension of others, of the sensitivity to fairness, and of the impermeability to decisional biases. However, neither adolescents nor adults reach the ideal level of maximization and of rationality of the homo economicus proposed by classical economics theory, thus remaining more close to the model of the “bounded rationality” proposed by cognitive psychology. In the present study, we analyzed two aspects of decision making in 110 participants from early adolescence to young adulthood: the sensitivity to fairness and the permeability to decisional biases (Outcome Bias and Hindsight Bias). To address these questions, we adopted a modified version of the Ultimatum Game task, where participants faced fair, unfair, and hyperfair offers from proposers described as generous, selfish, or neutral. We also administered two behavioral tasks testing the influence of the Outcome Bias and of the Hindsight Bias in the evaluation of the decision. Our behavioral results highlighted that the participants are still partially consequentialist, as the decisional process is influenced by a complex balance between the outcome and the psychological description of the proposer. As regards cognitive biases, the Outcome Bias and the Hindsight Bias are present in the whole sample, with no relevant age differences.


Europe’s Journal of Psychology | 2017

Adolescents’ and Young Adults' Naïve Understandings of the Economic Crisis

Anna Emilia Berti; Anna Maria Ajello; Carmela Aprea; Ilaria Castelli; Elisabetta Lombardi; Antonella Marchetti; Davide Massaro; Viviana Sappa; Annalisa Valle

Over the last decade, Financial Literacy (FL) and interventions aimed at improving it, that is Financial Education (FE), have been the focus of increased attention from economists, governments, and international organizations such as the world Bank and OECD, but much less by scholars in the fields of Learning and Instruction. We examined open-ended written answers on the causes of the economic crisis that started in 2007-2008, as given by 381 Italian secondary school and university students, and 268 Swiss Italian-speaking secondary school students. Most Italian students mentioned internal political causes (i.e., corrupt politicians or inefficiency of the government), whereas Swiss students mentioned banks more often. International factors were rarely mentioned by either group, and explanations were generally very poor, listing a few causes without making connections between them. These findings indicate the need for economics education aimed at making people more knowledgeable of the workings of the economic system and the effects of financial systems on the real economy.

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Antonella Marchetti

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Davide Massaro

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Ilaria Castelli

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Edoardo Alfredo Bracaglia

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Elisabetta Lombardi

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Francesca Sangiuliano Intra

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Federica Antonia Maria Savazzi

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Federica Rossetto

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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