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  1. The Sting of Intentional Pain.Daniel M. Wegner & Kurt Gray - unknown
    When someone steps on your toe on purpose, it seems to hurt more than when the person does the same thing unintentionally. The physical parameters of the harm may not differ—your toe is flattened in both cases—but the psychological experience of pain is changed nonetheless. Intentional harms are premeditated by another person and have the specific purpose of causing pain. In a sense, intended harms are events initiated by one mind to communicate meaning (malice) to another, and this could shape (...)
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  • (1 other version)Selective trust in testimony: Children's evaluation of the message, the speaker, and the speech act.Melissa A. Koenig - 2005 - In Tamar Szabó Gendler & John Hawthorne (eds.), Oxford Studies in Epistemology. Oxford University Press. pp. 3--253.
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  • How Mental Systems Believe.Daniel T. Gilbert - 1991 - American Psychologist 46 (2):107-119.
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  • Children's predictions of consistency in people's actions.C. Kalish - 2002 - Cognition 84 (3):237-265.
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  • Two reasons to abandon the false belief task as a test of theory of mind.Paul Bloom - 2000 - Cognition 77 (1):25-31.
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  • Three- and four-year-olds spontaneously use others' past performance to guide their learning.Paul Bloom - 2008 - Cognition 107 (3):1018-1034.
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  • The moral, epistemic, and mindreading components of children’s vigilance towards deception.Dan Sperber - 2009 - Cognition 112 (3):367-380.
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  • Knowing when to trust others: An ERP study of decision-making after receiving information from unknown people.Cheryl Boudreau, Mathew D. McCubbins & Seana Coulson - manuscript
    To address the neurocognitive mechanisms that underlie choices made after receiving information from an anonymous individual, reaction times (Experiment 1) and event-related brain potentials (Experiment 2) were recorded as participants played 3 variants of the Coin Toss game. In this game, participants guess the outcomes of unseen coin tosses, and a person in another room (dubbed "the reporter") observes the coin toss outcomes and then sends reports (which may or may not be truthful) to participants about whether the coins landed (...)
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