Dear All,
We would like to invite you to the next event from the ELTE Cognitive
Seminar series:
*Olivier Mascaro (Central European University (Budapest), Cognitive
Development Center)*
*The Power and Limits of Young Humans’ Smart Trust*
Place: ELTE-PPK, Institute of Psychology, Izabella utca 46, Révész Géza
room (room 301)
Time: December 3rd, 2015 (Thursday), 11:00
Abstract:
Humans have some faith in what is communicated to them, even when their
informants are complete strangers, who could be mistaken or lying. Where
does this trust come from? Although this question was raised more than two
centuries ago (e.g. Hume, 1748; Reid, 1764), it remains largely unanswered,
in great part because of a lack of appropriate empirical evidence. This
presentation targets directly this question by investigating the
development of trust in testimony during late infancy, toddlerhood and
childhood. I will present evidence suggesting that from 15 months of age,
infants’ trust in communication is both strong and smart. It is strong
enough to make infants disbelieve what they directly perceived. It is smart
enough to include conceptually rich expectations about communicated
information, that roughly map onto two classic philosophical definitions of
truth: correspondence and coherence theories (e.g. Descartes, 1639;
Davidson, 1986). Against the widespread view that young humans become more
skeptical as they grow up, I will provide evidence suggesting that infants’
disposition to be trusting increases during the toddler years. Improved
communicative abilities and additional opportunities to learn from others
could support this developmental stage of heightened trust in communicated
information, the “Trusting Twos”. Young human’s disposition to frame
communication as an exchange of reliable information supports cultural
transmission and learning at large. Yet, I will argue that it also explains
young children’s difficulties in lying and in being vigilant towards
deception. To some extent, it may also contribute to children’s
difficulties in interpreting games and stories involving deceivers and
dupes, such as standard false belief tasks.
Host: dr. Ildikó Király
Webiste of the ELTE Cognitive Seminar series:
https://sites.google.com/site/eltekognitiv/home/elte-kognitiv-szeminarium