Abstract

In recent years, there has been a heated debate about how to interpret findings that seem to show that humans rapidly and automatically calculate the visual perspectives of others. In this study, we investigated the question of whether automatic interference effects found in the dot-perspective task are the product of domain-specific perspective-taking processes or of domain-general “submentalising” processes. Previous attempts to address this question have done so by implementing inanimate controls, such as arrows, as stimuli. The rationale for this is that submentalising processes that respond to directionality should be engaged by such stimuli, whereas domain-specific perspective-taking mechanisms, if they exist, should not. These previous attempts have been limited, however, by the implied intentionality of the stimuli they have used (e.g., arrows), which may have invited participants to imbue them with perspectival agency. Drawing inspiration from “novel entity” paradigms from infant gaze–following research, we designed a version of the dot-perspective task that allowed us to precisely control whether a central stimulus was viewed as animate or inanimate. Across four experiments, we found no evidence that automatic “perspective-taking” effects in the dot-perspective task are modulated by beliefs about the animacy of the central stimulus. Our results also suggest that these effects may be due to the task-switching elements of the dot-perspective paradigm, rather than automatic directional orienting. Together, these results indicate that neither the perspective-taking nor the standard submentalising interpretations of the dot-perspective task are fully correct.

Highlights

  • Mindreading—the ability to predict and interpret the behaviour of others in terms of their underlying mental states—is widely believed to be a central part of human social cognition (Apperly, 2011; Baron-Cohen, 1997; Spaulding, 2018; Tomasello, 2014; Wellman, 2014)

  • As the calculation of inverse efficiency scores (IESs) entails that reaction time (RT) are quasi-exponentially multiplied as the hit rates (HRs) decreases, Bruyer and Brysbaert (2011) have recommend not using the IES unless the mean HR within a group is above 90%, and HRs are negatively correlated with RTs

  • The mean HR was above 90% in each experiment, and HRs were negatively correlated with RTs

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Summary

Introduction

Mindreading—the ability to predict and interpret the behaviour of others in terms of their underlying mental states—is widely believed to be a central part of human social cognition (Apperly, 2011; Baron-Cohen, 1997; Spaulding, 2018; Tomasello, 2014; Wellman, 2014). There is much more disagreement about whether more subtle instances of putative mentalising involve rapid, unconscious processing This is because many of the tasks used to detect these subtle forms of mindreading admit of lower level, non-mentalistic interpretations involving processes that only give the appearance of Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 74(10). Mental-state attribution—what Cecilia Heyes (2014, 2018) has called “submentalising.” If it were the case that many putatively mentalistic processes are the product of submentalising, this would force many mindreading theorists to radically rethink widespread ideas about the scope of mindreading in everyday social cognition. The trials of interest are those where the number of dots that the avatar can see is inconsistent with the number of dots the participant can see, and the participant must report on their own perspective. The avatar’s inconsistent perspective appears to interfere with the participant’s performance, leading to longer response times and increased rates of error

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