Interacciones entre el entendimiento de la falsa-creencia y el desarrollo de la habilidad verbal: diferencias entre los sexos en edad preescolar
artículo original

Fecha
2009Autor
Padilla Mora, Michael
Rodríguez Villagra, Odir Antonio
Fornaguera Trías, Jaime
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemResumen
En este artículo se analiza el desempeño de niños y niñas en
la resolución de tareas de falsa-creencia y se explora la posible
influencia del desarrollo de las habilidades verbales sobre las diferencias
de rendimiento entre ambos sexos en dichas tareas. El
trabajo incluye dos estudios: En el Estudio 1 se comparó el entendimiento
de la falsa-creencia y la habilidad verbal de 17 ni -
ños y 17 niñas costarricenses de 5 años, con el entendimiento de
la falsa-creencia y de la habilidad verbal de 17 niños y 17 niñas
costa rricenses de 6 años de edad. Para el Estudio 2, los mismos
participantes del grupo de 5 años del Estudio 1 fueron reevaluados
después de un período de 3 meses. En el Estudio 1, el grupo de
niñas de 6 años evidenció un desempeño significativamente ma -
yor que el grupo de niñas de 5 años, tanto en el índice de habilidad
verbal como en el entendimiento de la falsa-creencia. En contraste,
entre los niños de 5 y 6 años solo se encontró un incremento
no significativo en los puntajes de ambas variables. Luego de reevaluar a los participantes de 5 años, el Estudio 2 confirmó
estas diferencias entre ambos sexos y verificó que los incrementos
entre ambas variables son mutuamente dependientes. Los hallazgos
principales de ambos estudios señalan diferencias sig nificativas
en el desarrollo cognitivo de los preescolares según su
sexo. La relevancia de los resultados se discute en el contexto del
debate actual sobre las interacciones entre la habilidad verbal y
la teoría de la mente durante la edad preescolar. The purpose of this article is to analyze some developmental
interactions between cognitive processes during the preschool
period. In specific, we are interested in the interactions
between verbal ability and false-belief understanding. The research
explores the performance of boys and girls in the execution
of false-belief tasks, and evaluates the possible influence
of verbal ability development on the sex differences in the falsebelief
scores. In recent times, the emphasis on the sex differences
in this dimension of social cognition has been an
important issue stemming from the results of current lines of research.
The present work is divided in two studies. The Study 1
compares the false-belief understanding and verbal ability of 17
five-year-olds Costa Rican boys and 17 five-year-olds Costa
Rican girls, with the false-belief understanding and verbal ability
of 17 six-year-olds Costa Rican boys and 17 six-year-olds
Costa Rican girls. The main interest of this first study is focused
on the identification of interactions between the cognitive
processes of the participants. Sub sequently, in Study 2, the same
five-year-olds that participated in Study 1 were reevaluated
through the same measures after a period of 3 months. The goal
of this second study was to follow up the tendencies evidenced
in the previous study, after a brief period of time. As an attempt
to capture specific details in the development of these processes and given the recommendations of previous works, an interval
of 3 months between measures was used here for the first time
in the context of this line of research. All the participants were
students from a public preschool in the capital city of Costa Rica
and native speakers of the Spanish language. Additional inclusion
criteria take into account the absence of developmental disorders
and other antecedents of psychiatric / psychological
intervention. The assessment of false- belief understanding was
through a battery that includes four different false-belief tasks.
This battery was conformed by 3 first order false-belief tasks,
and one second order false-belief task. For the assessment of
verbal ability, the study includes 4 subtests (Information, Arithmetic,
Vocabulary, and Comprehension) from the WPPSI-III
Verbal Ability Scale. The results of the Study 1 evidenced that
the six-year-olds girls had significantly higher scores than the
five-year-olds girls, both in verbal ability and in false-belief understanding.
Interestingly, the improvements in both abilities
were mutually dependent. In contrast, the scores at the same
variables showed a small but not significant improvement between
five and six-year-olds boys. In Study 2, our results confirm
these sex differences through the reassessment of the same
five-year-olds, and verify that the improvements in both abilities
are mutually dependent. The main results of both studies highlights
important sex differences in the cognitive development of
preschool children. In both studies the false-belief understanding
and verbal ability improve significantly in girls but not in boys.
The implications of our data are discussed in the context of the
actual debate about the interaction between verbal ability and
theory of mind during the preschool years. The possible influences
of different socialization processes associated with a particular
gender are discussed, as well as other tentative mediating
factors like the empathic abilities or the influence produced by
the context of different daily play scenarios among boys and
girls. Research limitations like the particular period of assessment
between measures in the Study 2 or the necessity of more
tasks for each construct are also discussed. Finally, tentative
mechanisms that could account for our data are considered.