This study explored irony understanding in school-age children, when the irony is used in two different family relations: between a child and the child’s mother and between a child and a sibling. Two irony task typologies were used to assess 6-, 8-, and 10-year-olds’ understanding of the intended and expressed meanings (Study 1: N 1⁄4 77; Study 2: N 1⁄4 30). Results proved that the relationship with the mother, more than the relationship with a sibling, supported children’s irony understanding. A predictive effect of second-order false-belief understanding on irony comprehension was also found. The findings support the hypothesis that the irony understanding, at least in the acquisition phase, depends on the relational contexts in which it is used. The predictive effect of second-order recursive thinking confirms and extends the role of theory of mind in the management of ironic communication.

Massaro, D., Valle, A., Marchetti, A., Irony and second-order false belief in children: What changes when mothers rather than siblings speak?, <<THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY>>, 2013; 10 (3): 301-317. [doi:10.1080/17405629.2012.672272] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/5069]

Irony and second-order false belief in children: What changes when mothers rather than siblings speak?

Massaro, Davide;Valle, Annalisa;Marchetti, Antonella
2013

Abstract

This study explored irony understanding in school-age children, when the irony is used in two different family relations: between a child and the child’s mother and between a child and a sibling. Two irony task typologies were used to assess 6-, 8-, and 10-year-olds’ understanding of the intended and expressed meanings (Study 1: N 1⁄4 77; Study 2: N 1⁄4 30). Results proved that the relationship with the mother, more than the relationship with a sibling, supported children’s irony understanding. A predictive effect of second-order false-belief understanding on irony comprehension was also found. The findings support the hypothesis that the irony understanding, at least in the acquisition phase, depends on the relational contexts in which it is used. The predictive effect of second-order recursive thinking confirms and extends the role of theory of mind in the management of ironic communication.
2013
Inglese
Massaro, D., Valle, A., Marchetti, A., Irony and second-order false belief in children: What changes when mothers rather than siblings speak?, <<THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY>>, 2013; 10 (3): 301-317. [doi:10.1080/17405629.2012.672272] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/5069]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/5069
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