Distinguishing three levels in explicit self-awareness |
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Authors: | Legrain L Cleeremans A Destrebecqz A |
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Affiliation: | Université Libre de Bruxelles, Avenue FD Roosevelt, 50 (CP191), 1050 Brussels, Belgium |
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Abstract: | This paper focuses on the development of explicit self-awareness in children. Mirror self-recognition has been the most popular paradigm used to assess this ability in children. Nevertheless, according to Rochat (2003), there are, at least, three different levels of explicit self-awareness. We therefore designed three different self-recognition tasks, each corresponding to one of these levels (a mirror self-recognition task, a picture self-recognition task and a masked self-recognition task). We observed a decrease in performance across the three tasks. This supports a developmental scale in self-awareness. Besides, the masked self-recognition performance makes it possible to assess the final and the most sophisticated level of self-awareness, i.e. the external self. To our best knowledge, this task is the first attempt to evaluate the external self in preverbal children. Our results indicate that 22-month old children show awareness of their external self or, at least, that this ability is in the process of being acquired. |
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Keywords: | Infancy Self-awareness Self-recognition Development scale |
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