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McHugh, Barnes-Holmes & Barnes-Holmes, 2004

APA Citation

McHugh, L., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Barnes-Holmes, Y. (2004). A relational frame account of the development of complex cognitive phenomena: Perspective-taking, false belief understanding, and deception. International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 4 , 303-324.

Publication Topic
RFT: Empirical
Publication Type
Article
Language
English
Keyword(s)
Perspective-taking, false belief, deception, theory of mind, RFT, behavioral aproximations.
Abstract

Cognitive psychologists have devoted considerable attention to the complex skills described as perspective-taking, understanding false belief, and deception. Much of the available research on these phenomena has been driven by a conceptual approach referred to as ‘Theory of Mind’. The current paper reviews the Theory of Mind account of perspective taking, false belief and deception in terms of the development of increasingly complex levels of understanding the informational states of the self and others. In contrast, these phenomena have attracted little interest traditionally from behavioral psychologists, and the current paper presents conceptual and empirical evidence that this is changing. Specifically, an alternative approach to these skills from a functional behavioral framework is presented in the context of Relational Frame Theory, a modern behavioral account of human language and cognition. The paper describes the relational frame approach to perspective-taking, false belief and deception, and presents several recent studies that have investigated this approach. The results of the studies indicate the potential utility of this approach and also show considerable overlap with the results of Theory of Mind research.

Comments
This article recaps several previous studies that lead up to a study examining the developmental profile of perspective taking as relational responding. In it, McHugh et al discuss the development of the protocol used in that study using undergraduate students. They discovered that these participants were able to derive relations within Deictic frames, and that the relation of I-YOU showed the least errors. Next, they discuss the three studies that laid out the developmental profile of perspective taking as relational responding, and report the results and implications. Further, they report briefly on preliminary protocol that assesses the highest two levels of Theory of Mind (understanding false belief and deception). They report that understanding false belief and deception can be showed within an RFT preparation and implications for the theory in the domain of Theory of Mind are discussed.