Burcu Arslan
University of Groningen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Burcu Arslan.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Burcu Arslan; Annette Hohenberger; Rineke Verbrugge
In this study, we focus on the possible roles of second-order syntactic recursion and working memory in terms of simple and complex span tasks in the development of second-order false belief reasoning. We tested 89 Turkish children in two age groups, one younger (4;6–6;5 years) and one older (6;7–8;10 years). Although second-order syntactic recursion is significantly correlated with the second-order false belief task, results of ordinal logistic regressions revealed that the main predictor of second-order false belief reasoning is complex working memory span. Unlike simple working memory and second-order syntactic recursion tasks, the complex working memory task required processing information serially with additional reasoning demands that require complex working memory strategies. Based on our results, we propose that children’s second-order theory of mind develops when they have efficient reasoning rules to process embedded beliefs serially, thus overcoming a possible serial processing bottleneck.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2017
Burcu Arslan; Niels Taatgen; Rineke Verbrugge
The focus of studies on second-order false belief reasoning generally was on investigating the roles of executive functions and language with correlational studies. Different from those studies, we focus on the question how 5-year-olds select and revise reasoning strategies in second-order false belief tasks by constructing two computational cognitive models of this process: an instance-based learning model and a reinforcement learning model. Unlike the reinforcement learning model, the instance-based learning model predicted that children who fail second-order false belief tasks would give answers based on first-order theory of mind (ToM) reasoning as opposed to zero-order reasoning. This prediction was confirmed with an empirical study that we conducted with 72 5- to 6-year-old children. The results showed that 17% of the answers were correct and 83% of the answers were wrong. In line with our prediction, 65% of the wrong answers were based on a first-order ToM strategy, while only 29% of them were based on a zero-order strategy (the remaining 6% of subjects did not provide any answer). Based on our instance-based learning model, we propose that when children get feedback “Wrong,” they explicitly revise their strategy to a higher level instead of implicitly selecting one of the available ToM strategies. Moreover, we predict that children’s failures are due to lack of experience and that with exposure to second-order false belief reasoning, children can revise their wrong first-order reasoning strategy to a correct second-order reasoning strategy.
international conference on cognitive modelling | 2013
Burcu Arslan; Niels Taatgen; Laurina Verbrugge
conference cognitive science | 2012
Burcu Arslan; Annette Hohenberger; Rineke Verbrugge
Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Cognitive Modeling | 2015
Burcu Arslan; Stefan M. Wierda; Niels Taatgen; Rineke Verbrugge
Cognitive Science | 2015
Burcu Arslan; Rineke Verbrugge; Niels Taatgen; Bartjan Hollebrandse
Proceedings of the Second Workshop Reasoning About Other Minds: Logical and Cognitive Perspectives | 2014
Burcu Arslan; Rineke Verbrugge; Niels Taatgen; Bartjan Hollebrandse
roceedings of the 37th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society. Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society | 2015
Burcu Arslan; Rineke Verbrugge; Niels Taatgen; Bartjan Hollebrandse
University of Groningen | 2015
Burcu Arslan; Stefan M. Wierda; Niels Taatgen; Rineke Verbrugge
Proceedings of the Second Workshop Reasoning About Other Minds: Logical and Cognitive Perspectives | 2014
Stefan M. Wierda; Burcu Arslan