Computer-Based Neuropsychological Theory of Mind Assessment: A Validation Study

Author(s):  
Gilberto Galindo-Aldana ◽  
Alberto L. Morán ◽  
Cynthia Torres-González ◽  
Lesdly Cabero ◽  
Victoria Meza-Kubo
1988 ◽  
Vol 32 (5) ◽  
pp. 409-413
Author(s):  
Patricia M. Jones

In the supervisory control of a complex, dynamic system, one potential form of aiding for the human operator is a computer-based operator's associate. The design philosophy of the operator's associate is that of “amplifying” rather than automating human skills. In particular, the associate possesses understanding and control properties. Understanding allows it to infer operator intentions and thus form the basis for context-dependent advice and reminders; control properties allow the human operator to dynamically delegate individual tasks or subfunctions to the associate. This paper focuses on the design, implementation, and validation of the intent inferencing function. Two validation studies are described which empirically demonstrate the viability of the proposed approach to intent inferencing.


Author(s):  
Leo J. Gugerty ◽  
William C. Tirre

The first experiment found that varying the rate of road hazards in a personal-computer-based driving simulator had no effect on subjects' situation awareness, as measured in the simulator. Thus, setting a high rate of hazards does not distort subjects' situation awareness. In the second experiment, the situation awareness test was found to predict driving performance in a realistic simulator. Individual differences in situation awareness were correlated with working memory and psychomotor abilities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barlow C. Wright ◽  
Bernice A. L. Wright

Many studies imply causal links between linguistic competencies and Theory of Mind (ToM). But despite Dyslexia being a prime example of linguistic deficits, studies on whether it is related to ToM have been relatively unforthcoming. In the first of 2 studies (N = 89), independently-diagnosed dyslexic adults and non-dyslexic adults were presented with false-belief vignettes via computer, answering 4 types of question (Factual, Inference, 1st-order ToM & 2nd-order ToM). Dyslexia related to lower false-belief scores. Study 2 (N = 93) replicated this result with a non-computer-based variant on the false-belief task. We considered the possibility that the apparent-issue with ToM is caused by processing demands more associated to domains of cognition such as language, than to ToM itself. Addressing this possibility, study 2 additionally utilised the ToM30Q questionnaire, designed largely to circumvent issues related to language and memory. Principal-Components analysis extracted 4 factors, 2 capturing perceptual/representational ToM, and the other 2 capturing affective components related to ToM. The ToM30Q was validated via its associations to a published measure of empathy, replication of the female gender advantage over males, and for one factor from the ToM30Q there was a correlation with an existing published index of ToM. However, when we considered the performance of dyslexic and non-dyslexic participants using the ToM30Q, we found absolutely no difference between them. The contrasting findings from our 2 studies here, arguably offer the first experimental evidence with adults, that there is in fact no ToM deficit in dyslexia. Additionally, this finding raises the possibility that some other groups considered in some sense atypical, failed ToM tasks, not because they actually have a ToM deficit at all, but rather because they are asked to reveal their ToM competence through cognitive domains, such as language and memory.


2003 ◽  
Vol 98 ◽  
pp. S300
Author(s):  
Mahmoud Yousfi ◽  
Todd Baron ◽  
Billie Horn ◽  
David E. Fleischer ◽  
Darius Sorbi

Author(s):  
Robert Sweet ◽  
Tran ◽  
Gupta ◽  
Poniatowski ◽  
Alanee ◽  
...  

PLoS ONE ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. e0235209
Author(s):  
Christian Burkhart ◽  
Andreas Lachner ◽  
Matthias Nückles

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