SOCIAL COGNITION: social cognition, social thinking, or theory of mind is the understanding or awareness that one has desires, beliefs, and thoughts, and that other people have other desires, beliefs, and thoughts.
According to Flavell (2006) the developement of social cognition depends upon 3 things: existence, need, and inference.
- Existence—understanding that certain things are part of the social world and possible for one’s own life
- Need—motivation to understand others’ thoughts and emotions
- Inference—ability to understand others’ thoughts and feelings
BECOMING SOCIAL THINKERS—INFANTS
- Learn to pair gestures or facial expressions with voices
- Learn that people have constant sizes, shapes, and faces, and that objects continue to exist when not seen.
- Begin to imitate adults and take an interest in adults who imitate them. One study placed an infant across from two adults.
- Learn to follow an adult’s gaze to see the same object the adult sees, or to point to an object of interest to engage the adult in sharing the view of the same object.
- Begin to learn to “read” people, or understand people’s desires, thoughts, and intentions, and to find ways to affect what adults do.
- Begin to develop self-images and expectations dealing with relationships based upon previous experience.
Posted on
Wed, August 31, 2011
by Dr. Karina Poirier
filed under