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Young Children Are More Generous when Others Are Aware of Their Actions

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, October 2012
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Title
Young Children Are More Generous when Others Are Aware of Their Actions
Published in
PLOS ONE, October 2012
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0048292
Pubmed ID
Authors

Kristin L. Leimgruber, Alex Shaw, Laurie R. Santos, Kristina R. Olson

Abstract

Adults frequently employ reputation-enhancing strategies when engaging in prosocial acts, behaving more generously when their actions are likely to be witnessed by others and even more so when the extent of their generosity is made public. This study examined the developmental origins of sensitivity to cues associated with reputationally motivated prosociality by presenting five-year-olds with the option to provide one or four stickers to a familiar peer recipient at no cost to themselves. We systematically manipulated the recipient's knowledge of the actor's choices in two different ways: (1) occluding the recipient's view of both the actor and the allocation options and (2) presenting allocations in opaque containers whose contents were visible only to the actor. Children were consistently generous only when the recipient was fully aware of the donation options; in all cases in which the recipient was not aware of the donation options, children were strikingly ungenerous. These results demonstrate that five-year-olds exhibit "strategic prosociality," behaving differentially generous as a function of the amount of information available to the recipient about their actions. These findings suggest that long before they develop a rich understanding of the social significance of reputation or are conscious of complex strategic reasoning, children behave more generously when the details of their prosocial actions are available to others.

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The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 234 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Hungary 2 <1%
United States 2 <1%
United Kingdom 2 <1%
Germany 1 <1%
Malaysia 1 <1%
Belgium 1 <1%
Canada 1 <1%
Unknown 224 96%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 62 26%
Student > Bachelor 35 15%
Student > Master 30 13%
Student > Doctoral Student 25 11%
Researcher 18 8%
Other 34 15%
Unknown 30 13%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Psychology 146 62%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 11 5%
Social Sciences 11 5%
Economics, Econometrics and Finance 6 3%
Linguistics 3 1%
Other 18 8%
Unknown 39 17%