What is it about?
People spend considerable amounts of time on movies, novels, comic books, video games, role playing, and pretense. In doing so, they experience, remember, and discuss fictional information and imaginary worlds. Research on thinking has mostly assumed that people solve tasks and remember facts about the real world. We want to highlight how considering also thinking about fictional information could change the way researchers understand human thinking.
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Why is it important?
We point out that important paths of research open when also considering that people handle fictional information. For example, on a daily basis, people need to make distinctions between real and fictional information. How is this done? Another example is that future social robots may need to be equipped with the ability to handle fictional information to work adequately in human home environments.
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This page is a summary of: Taking the unreal seriously: enriching cognitive science with the notion of fictionality, Frontiers in Psychology, September 2023, Frontiers,
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1205891.
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