Young children make sophisticated social and normative inferences based on proportional reasoning. We explored the possibility that proportional cues also help children learn from and about their own generosity. Across two experiments, 3- to 4-year-olds had the opportunity to give either 1 of 4, 1 of 3, 1 of 2, or 1 of 1 of their resources to an individual in need. We then measured children’s subsequent prosociality by looking at sharing behavior with a new individual. The more proportionally generous the initial action, the less likely children were to share selfishly in the second phase. Our results suggest that children make sense of their...
This study investigated how the presence of others and anticipated distributions for self influence ...
Evolutionary models of cooperation require proximate mechanisms that sustain prosociality despite in...
Evolutionary models of cooperation require proximate mechanisms that sustain prosociality despite in...
Research points to evidence of innate prosocial tendencies present early in life. As more complex co...
Recent studies have provided evidence that young children already engage in sharing behavior. The un...
Research has demonstrated that prosocial sharing is emotionally rewarding, which leads to further ...
Young children endorse norms of fairness but rarely act on them. We investigated whether a failure o...
By 7-to 8-years of age, most children readily adhere to prosocial norms aimed at benefiting others t...
Two studies investigated the influence of external rewards and social praise in young children's fai...
Merit is a key principle of fairness: rewards should be distributed according to how much someone co...
<div><p>Recent research has found that even preschoolers give more resources to others who have prev...
The aim of the current study was to determine whether the level of generosity shown by 3- to 8-year-...
As material resources are limited, partiality is sometimes unavoidable. Thus, even young children ha...
Prosociality encompasses a variety of actions aimed at benefitting another person, (e.g., Brownell, ...
Recent research has found that even preschoolers give more resources to others who have previously g...
This study investigated how the presence of others and anticipated distributions for self influence ...
Evolutionary models of cooperation require proximate mechanisms that sustain prosociality despite in...
Evolutionary models of cooperation require proximate mechanisms that sustain prosociality despite in...
Research points to evidence of innate prosocial tendencies present early in life. As more complex co...
Recent studies have provided evidence that young children already engage in sharing behavior. The un...
Research has demonstrated that prosocial sharing is emotionally rewarding, which leads to further ...
Young children endorse norms of fairness but rarely act on them. We investigated whether a failure o...
By 7-to 8-years of age, most children readily adhere to prosocial norms aimed at benefiting others t...
Two studies investigated the influence of external rewards and social praise in young children's fai...
Merit is a key principle of fairness: rewards should be distributed according to how much someone co...
<div><p>Recent research has found that even preschoolers give more resources to others who have prev...
The aim of the current study was to determine whether the level of generosity shown by 3- to 8-year-...
As material resources are limited, partiality is sometimes unavoidable. Thus, even young children ha...
Prosociality encompasses a variety of actions aimed at benefitting another person, (e.g., Brownell, ...
Recent research has found that even preschoolers give more resources to others who have previously g...
This study investigated how the presence of others and anticipated distributions for self influence ...
Evolutionary models of cooperation require proximate mechanisms that sustain prosociality despite in...
Evolutionary models of cooperation require proximate mechanisms that sustain prosociality despite in...