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Featured researches published by Tamsin C. German.


Cognition | 2009

A developmental dissociation between category and function judgments about novel artifacts

Margaret Anne Defeyter; Jill Hearing; Tamsin C. German

Two studies investigated the relative importance of information about intended design and current use on judgments about the function (Experiment 1) or category (Experiment 2) of novel artifacts in preschool children and adults. Adults assigned function and name on the basis of information about design across all conditions, while childrens decisions about function dissociated from decisions about category. Function judgments (in both 4 and 6-year-olds) were neutral between design and current use, both when the current use was idiosyncratic (e.g. performed by just one agent) and conventional (performed by many people; Experiment 1). By contrast, where category judgments were required for the very same objects (Experiment 2), children named according to design intentions - but only if the alternate function was idiosyncratic. Judging function and assigning category are thus cognitive tasks that draw on different information across development, a fact that should be captured by theories of developing artifact concept structure.


Cognitive Science | 2017

Automatic Mechanisms for Social Attention Are Culturally Penetrable

Adam S. Cohen; Joni Y. Sasaki; Tamsin C. German; Heejung S. Kim

Are mechanisms for social attention influenced by culture? Evidence that social attention is triggered automatically by bottom-up gaze cues and is uninfluenced by top-down verbal instructions may suggest it operates in the same way everywhere. Yet considerations from evolutionary and cultural psychology suggest that specific aspects of ones cultural background may have consequence for the way mechanisms for social attention develop and operate. In more interdependent cultures, the scope of social attention may be broader, focusing on more individuals and relations between those individuals. We administered a multi-gaze cueing task requiring participants to fixate a foreground face flanked by background faces and measured shifts in attention using eye tracking. For European Americans, gaze cueing did not depend on the direction of background gaze cues, suggesting foreground gaze alone drives automatic attention shifting; for East Asians, cueing patterns differed depending on whether the foreground cue matched or mismatched background cues, suggesting foreground and background gaze information were integrated. These results demonstrate that cultural background influences the social attention system by shifting it into a narrow or broad mode of operation and, importantly, provides evidence challenging the assumption that mechanisms underlying automatic social attention are necessarily rigid and impenetrable to culture.


Cognition | 2015

Specialized mechanisms for theory of mind: are mental representations special because they are mental or because they are representations?

Adam S. Cohen; Joni Y. Sasaki; Tamsin C. German

Does theory of mind depend on a capacity to reason about representations generally or on mechanisms selective for the processing of mental state representations? In four experiments, participants reasoned about beliefs (mental representations) and notes (non-mental, linguistic representations), which according to two prominent theories are closely matched representations because both are represented propositionally. Reaction times were faster and accuracies higher when participants endorsed or rejected statements about false beliefs than about false notes (Experiment 1), even when statements emphasized representational format (Experiment 2), which should have favored the activation of representation concepts. Experiments 3 and 4 ruled out a counterhypothesis that differences in task demands were responsible for the advantage in belief processing. These results demonstrate for the first time that understanding of mental and linguistic representations can be dissociated even though both may carry propositional content, supporting the theory that mechanisms governing theory of mind reasoning are narrowly specialized to process mental states, not representations more broadly. Extending this theory, we discuss whether less efficient processing of non-mental representations may be a by-product of mechanisms specialized for processing mental states.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Theory of Mind in the Wild: Toward Tackling the Challenges of Everyday Mental State Reasoning

Annie E. Wertz; Tamsin C. German

A complete understanding of the cognitive systems underwriting theory of mind (ToM) abilities requires articulating how mental state representations are generated and processed in everyday situations. Individuals rarely announce their intentions prior to acting, and actions are often consistent with multiple mental states. In order for ToM to operate effectively in such situations, mental state representations should be generated in response to certain actions, even when those actions occur in the presence of mental state content derived from other aspects of the situation. Results from three experiments with preschool children and adults demonstrate that mental state information is indeed generated based on an approach action cue in situations that contain competing mental state information. Further, the frequency with which participants produced or endorsed explanations that include mental states about an approached object decreased when the competing mental state information about a different object was made explicit. This set of experiments provides some of the first steps toward identifying the observable action cues that are used to generate mental state representations in everyday situations and offers insight into how both young children and adults processes multiple mental state representations.


Cognition | 2009

Encoding of others' beliefs without overt instruction

Adam S. Cohen; Tamsin C. German


Neuropsychologia | 2010

The scope of social attention deficits in autism: prioritized orienting to people and animals in static natural scenes.

Joshua J. New; Robert T. Schultz; Julie M. Wolf; Jeffrey L. Niehaus; Ami Klin; Tamsin C. German; Brian J. Scholl


Cognition | 2010

A reaction time advantage for calculating beliefs over public representations signals domain specificity for 'theory of mind'.

Adam S. Cohen; Tamsin C. German


Evolution and Human Behavior | 2015

Spiders at the cocktail party: an ancestral threat that surmounts inattentional blindness

Joshua J. New; Tamsin C. German


Developmental Science | 2007

Developmental changes in information central to artifact representation: evidence from ‘functional fluency’ tasks

Margaret Anne Defeyter; S.E. Avons; Tamsin C. German


Cognition | 2007

Belief–desire reasoning in the explanation of behavior: Do actions speak louder than words?☆

Annie E. Wertz; Tamsin C. German

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Adam S. Cohen

University of California

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Adam B. Cohen

Arizona State University

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