15
October - Clark Barrett
UCLA
Anthropology
The
Evolutionary Origins of Mindreading
One thing that humans are good at is predicting the behavior of other living
things. We do it so often and so effortlessly that we scarcely notice ourselves
“mindreading”: automatically computing the goals, motivations, and intentions
of others. Why are we so good at this, and how do we manage to do it?
In recent years there has been an explosion of interest in this phenomenon.
Many studies have focused on one component of mindreading – the ability
to understand true and false beliefs, a sophisticated skill that emerges
relatively late in childhood – but there have been fewer investigations
of more fundamental building blocks of behavior prediction on which such
advanced skills may rely.
In this talk I argue that the first step in behavior prediction is solving
a particular kind of frame problem: knowing what kind of interaction one
is engaged in. This is a crucial step because it prunes the enormous tree
of possible predicted behaviors to a single, manageable branch. It is made
possible because interactions can be sorted into natural kinds, each with
its own set of predictive principles and diagnostic cues. I briefly sketch
the results of several studies of the conceptual and perceptual machinery
that helps us to solve this frame problem, with particular reference to
predator-prey interactions, and discuss implications for the understanding
of human cognitive evolution.