Social exclusion is a hurtful experience that can lead to detrimental effects in the social, cognitive, and physiological domains. These consequences can lead to poor, potentially long-lasting, negative outcomes for children. Therefore, it is critical for excluded children to reduce the impact of its negative effects. One helpful strategy to accomplish this is to select social partners who are likely to be inclusive. The current dissertation investigates cognitive processes that may underly children’s partner choice, including the abilities to detect, track, and evaluate social excluders. In Experiment 1, 4-year-old children (n = 32) experienced direct inclusion and exclusion before evaluating target characters. Surprisingly, children in th...
Research on the use of toys and materials as a setting event for social interaction between children...
Social relationships are important in the development of young children\u27s cognitive, language and...
The need-to-belong theory stipulates that social exclusion fosters aggression, whereas the social-re...
Exclusion leads to negative effects across the social and cognitive domains (Wesselman & Williams, 2...
This study investigates how culture and priming 3- to 7-year-old children (N = 186) with third-party...
In Study 1, 167 English children aged 6-8 or 9-11 evaluated peer English or French soccer fans that ...
Social exclusion threatens a person’s need to belong and prompts them to behave in ways that often f...
Humans are a profoundly social species, aligning with groups, forming group identification, and navi...
This study examined whether victimization is associated with negatively distorted social cognition (...
Much is known about when children acquire an understanding of mental states, but few, if any, experi...
Much is known about when children acquire an understanding of mental states, but few, if any, experi...
Interpersonal rejection and intergroup exclusion in childhood reflect different, but complementary, ...
In Study 1, 167 English children aged 6–8 or 9–11 evaluated peer English or French soccer fans that ...
This study examined the relationships between 32 typically developing preschoolers??? attitudes and ...
Research on the use of toys and materials as a setting event for social interaction between children...
Social relationships are important in the development of young children\u27s cognitive, language and...
The need-to-belong theory stipulates that social exclusion fosters aggression, whereas the social-re...
Exclusion leads to negative effects across the social and cognitive domains (Wesselman & Williams, 2...
This study investigates how culture and priming 3- to 7-year-old children (N = 186) with third-party...
In Study 1, 167 English children aged 6-8 or 9-11 evaluated peer English or French soccer fans that ...
Social exclusion threatens a person’s need to belong and prompts them to behave in ways that often f...
Humans are a profoundly social species, aligning with groups, forming group identification, and navi...
This study examined whether victimization is associated with negatively distorted social cognition (...
Much is known about when children acquire an understanding of mental states, but few, if any, experi...
Much is known about when children acquire an understanding of mental states, but few, if any, experi...
Interpersonal rejection and intergroup exclusion in childhood reflect different, but complementary, ...
In Study 1, 167 English children aged 6–8 or 9–11 evaluated peer English or French soccer fans that ...
This study examined the relationships between 32 typically developing preschoolers??? attitudes and ...
Research on the use of toys and materials as a setting event for social interaction between children...
Social relationships are important in the development of young children\u27s cognitive, language and...
The need-to-belong theory stipulates that social exclusion fosters aggression, whereas the social-re...