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An assessment of age differences in theory of mind using the virtual assessment of mentalizing ability
Authors:Sarah A. Grainger  Vidhya Rakunathan  Alexandra G. Adams  Allana L. Canty  Julie D. Henry
Affiliation:1. School of Psychology, University of Queensland , Brisbane, Australia s.grainger@uq.edu.au;3. School of Psychology, University of Queensland , Brisbane, Australia;4. School of Psychology, University of Queensland , Brisbane, Australia "ORCIDhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6062-8885;5. School of Applied Psychology, Griffith University , Brisbane, Australia
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Prior research has shown that older adults perform more poorly than young on tasks that assess theory of mind (ToM). However, these studies have used tasks that are performed “offline” (i.e., requiring a second-person perspective) as opposed to “online” (i.e., requiring a first-person perspective). Therefore, the present study was designed to establish whether age-related ToM difficulties are also evident when an “online” measure of ToM is used. Forty younger and 40 older adults completed the Virtual Assessment of Mentalizing Ability (VAMA) along with two conventional ToM tasks. No age differences were evident on the conventional measures, but older adults had lower accuracy on the VAMA relative to their younger counterparts. The overall pattern of errors did not differ between the groups. These data provide no evidence that age effects are reduced when stimuli are used that are more likely to engage the mentalizing processes elicited in real life social interactions.
Keywords:Mentalizing  theory of mind  virtual assessments  social interactions  age differences
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