Children assess informant reliability using bystanders' non-verbal cues.

Recent findings show that preschool children are selective with respect to whom they ask for information and whose claims they endorse. In particular, they monitor an informant's record of past accuracy or inaccuracy and use that record to gauge future trustworthiness. We ask if preschoolers also monitor the non-verbal cues of assent or dissent that bystanders display toward an informant's claims and use that information to gauge an informant's trustworthiness. In familiarization trials, 4-year-olds watched as two adult informants made conflicting claims regarding the name of an unfamiliar object. Two adult bystanders consistently signaled assent - via nods and smiles - to the claims of one informant, and dissent - via head shakes and frowns - from the claims of the other informant. When invited to endorse one of the two claims, 4-year-olds mostly agreed with the informant who had received bystander assent. Thus, in the absence of background knowledge about an object's name, children use third-party non-verbal signals to assess the accuracy of conflicting labels. On subsequent test trials, the informants again made conflicting claims about novel object names, but in the absence of the two bystanders. Despite the lack of any informative bystander signals, children with more advanced understanding of mental states continued to display greater trust in the informant who had received bystander assent in the earlier trials.

[1]  Joseph j. Campos HUMAN EMOTIONS:THEIR NEW IMPORTANCE AND THEIR ROLE IN SOCIAL REFERENCING , 1982 .

[2]  S. Feinman,et al.  Social referencing at ten months: a second-order effect on infants' responses to strangers. , 1983, Child development.

[3]  J. Campos,et al.  Maternal emotional signaling: Its effect on the visual cliff behavior of 1-year-olds. , 1985 .

[4]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  Infants' ability to consult the speaker for clues to word reference , 1993, Journal of Child Language.

[5]  Michael Tomasello,et al.  Learning words in nonostensive contexts , 1994 .

[6]  D. L. Mumme,et al.  Infants' responses to facial and vocal emotional signals in a social referencing paradigm. , 1996, Child development.

[7]  M. Tomasello,et al.  Eighteen-month-old children learn words in non-ostensive contexts , 1996, Journal of Child Language.

[8]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  The Ontogeny of Social Information Gathering , 1996 .

[9]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  Infants' reliance on a social criterion for establishing word-object relations. , 1996, Child development.

[10]  Claire Hughes,et al.  Executive function in preschoolers: Links with theory of mind and verbal ability , 1998 .

[11]  Larissa K. Samuelson,et al.  Memory and attention make smart word learning: an alternative account of Akhtar, Carpenter, and Tomasello. , 1998, Child development.

[12]  H. Wellman,et al.  Meta-analysis of theory-of-mind development: the truth about false belief. , 2001, Child development.

[13]  Dare A. Baldwin,et al.  Learning words from knowledgeable versus ignorant speakers: links between preschoolers' theory of mind and semantic development. , 2001, Child development.

[14]  Stephanie M. Carlson,et al.  How specific is the relation between executive function and theory of mind? Contributions of inhibitory control and working memory , 2002 .

[15]  Paul L. Harris,et al.  The Ontogenesis of Trust , 2004 .

[16]  H. Wellman,et al.  Scaling of theory-of-mind tasks. , 2004, Child development.

[17]  P. Harris,et al.  Trust in Testimony: Children's Use of True and False Statements , 2004, Psychological science.

[18]  H. Wellman,et al.  Steps in theory-of-mind development for children with deafness or autism. , 2005, Child development.

[19]  Ulrich Müller,et al.  Executive function and children's understanding of false belief: how specific is the relation? , 2005 .

[20]  P. Harris,et al.  Preschoolers mistrust ignorant and inaccurate speakers. , 2005, Child development.

[21]  V. Jaswal,et al.  Adults Don't Always Know Best , 2006, Psychological science.

[22]  P. Harris,et al.  Germs and angels: the role of testimony in young children's ontology. , 2006, Developmental science.

[23]  P. Harris,et al.  Preschoolers monitor the relative accuracy of informants. , 2007, Developmental psychology.

[24]  Michael M Chouinard Children's questions: a mechanism for cognitive development. , 2007, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development.