Volume 18, Issue 6 pp. 745-764
Research Article

How knowing and doing inform an autobiography: relations among preschoolers' theory of mind, narrative, and event memory skills

Erica Kleinknecht

Corresponding Author

Erica Kleinknecht

University of Arkansas, USA

2043 College Way, Pacific University, Forest Grove, OR 97116, USA.Search for more papers by this author
Denise R. Beike

Denise R. Beike

University of Arkansas, USA

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First published: 15 June 2004
Citations: 32

Abstract

Research on the development of autobiographical memory in children has revealed the importance of two seemingly separate but related factors: Theory of mind, or the ability to know what another can and cannot know, and narrative skill, or the ability to tell a coherently structured story. The present research study with 22 preschoolers examined the extent to which each factor predicts two separate components of autobiographical memory ability: (1) the content of memory and (2) the structure of the memory narrative. As hypothesized, we found that theory of mind skills predicted the ‘how’ or structure of the children's fictional story narratives, whereas narrative skills predicted the ‘how much’ or content of the children's memory. Implications for the development of autobiographical memory are discussed. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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