Mechanisms for overcoming reality status biases
Children use many cues to differentiate reality from fantasy, including context, testimony from others, and physical evidence in the world around them. However, due to individual differences, some children hold strong reality status biases that interfere with their ability to infer reality status fr...
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ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-153442015-09-20T17:06:01ZMechanisms for overcoming reality status biasesTullos, Sara AnsleyReality status biasesChildrenRealityFantasyInhibitory controlCertaintyChildren use many cues to differentiate reality from fantasy, including context, testimony from others, and physical evidence in the world around them. However, due to individual differences, some children hold strong reality status biases that interfere with their ability to infer reality status from these cues correctly. This research identified two general cognitive skills, inhibitory control and a metacognitive understanding of certainty, which serve as mechanisms for overcoming biases to infer reality status. In general, children with a high interest in fantastical play and older children with poorer developed inhibitory control skills are more likely to display a reality status bias. Additionally, children with reality status biases are more likely to overcome them to infer reality status correctly when they have a better metacognitive understanding of certainty and better developed inhibitory control. This research informs both the fantasy/reality literature and the scientific reasoning literature in demonstrating how biases can affect children's judgments.text2012-04-10T13:56:03Z2012-04-10T13:56:03Z2009-052012-04-10textelectronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/15344engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works. |
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Reality status biases Children Reality Fantasy Inhibitory control Certainty |
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Reality status biases Children Reality Fantasy Inhibitory control Certainty Tullos, Sara Ansley Mechanisms for overcoming reality status biases |
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Children use many cues to differentiate reality from fantasy, including context, testimony from others, and physical evidence in the world around them. However, due to individual differences, some children hold strong reality status biases that interfere with their ability to infer reality status from these cues correctly. This research identified two general cognitive skills, inhibitory control and a metacognitive understanding of certainty, which serve as mechanisms for overcoming biases to infer reality status. In general, children with a high interest in fantastical play and older children with poorer developed inhibitory control skills are more likely to display a reality status bias. Additionally, children with reality status biases are more likely to overcome them to infer reality status correctly when they have a better metacognitive understanding of certainty and better developed inhibitory control. This research informs both the fantasy/reality literature and the scientific reasoning literature in demonstrating how biases can affect children's judgments. === text |
author |
Tullos, Sara Ansley |
author_facet |
Tullos, Sara Ansley |
author_sort |
Tullos, Sara Ansley |
title |
Mechanisms for overcoming reality status biases |
title_short |
Mechanisms for overcoming reality status biases |
title_full |
Mechanisms for overcoming reality status biases |
title_fullStr |
Mechanisms for overcoming reality status biases |
title_full_unstemmed |
Mechanisms for overcoming reality status biases |
title_sort |
mechanisms for overcoming reality status biases |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2152/15344 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT tullossaraansley mechanismsforovercomingrealitystatusbiases |
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1716822187631968256 |