儿童时期第三方干预的跨文化概念。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1037/xge0001617
Julia Marshall, Kellen Mermin-Bunnell, Anton Gollwitzer, Jan Retelsdorf, Paul Bloom
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引用次数: 0

摘要

第三方干预是合作社会的基石,但我们对儿童如何理解这种社会行为却知之甚少。本研究对四个社会(印度、德国、乌干达和美国)的 6 岁、9 岁和 12 岁儿童(人数 = 447)如何推理第三方干预进行了跨文化和发展性研究。为此,我们测量了儿童对第三方干预的义务判断和非结构化描述。尽管出现了一些文化差异,但 6 岁儿童大多认为旁观者有义务对不法行为做出反应,无论旁观者的社会地位如何。相比之下,9 岁和 12 岁的儿童更倾向于把这种社会责任完全归咎于有权势的人。尽管存在这些年龄差异,但各年龄段的儿童对第三方干预的描述都有其特定的角色,权威人物与同龄人的干预方式截然不同。对于权威人物,印度和乌干达儿童描述的第三方干预包括体罚或不明处罚,而美国儿童描述的第三方干预只包括口头干预(即告诉某人停止)。对于同龄人,所有社会的儿童都把第三方干预描述为向权威报告不法行为。总之,这些数据表明,第三方干预的早期概念根植于共同的义务观念,但也受到文化和环境的影响。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, 版权所有)。
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Cross-cultural conceptions of third-party intervention across childhood.

Third-party intervention is a cornerstone of cooperative societies, yet we know little about how children develop an understanding of this social behavior. The present work generates a cross-cultural and developmental picture of how 6-, 9-, and 12-year-olds (N = 447) across four societies (India, Germany, Uganda, and the United States) reason about third-party intervention. To do so, we measured children's obligation judgments and unstructured descriptions of third-party intervention. Although some cultural differences emerged, 6-year-olds largely considered bystanders as obligated to respond to wrongdoing, regardless of the bystander's social position. In contrast, 9- and 12-year-olds were more likely to exclusively ascribe this social responsibility to people in positions of authority. Despite these age differences, children of all ages generated role-specific descriptions of third-party intervention, with authority figures intervening in distinct ways from peers. For authority figures, children in India and Uganda described third-party intervention as involving corporal punishment or unspecified punishment, whereas children in the United States described such intervention as involving only verbal intervention (i.e., telling someone to stop). For peers, children in all societies described third-party intervention as involving reporting misdeeds to an authority. Collectively, these data show that early conceptualizations of third-party intervention are rooted in shared notions of obligation yet are also subject to cultural and contextual influences. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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