Recent research has shown that young children rely on social cues to evaluate testimony. For instance, they prefer to endorse testimony provided by a consensual group than by a single dissenter. Given that dominance is pervasive in children’s social environment, it can be hypothesized that children also use dominance relations in their selection of testimony. To test this hypothesis, a dominance asymmetry was induced between two characters either by having one repeatedly win in physical contests (physical power; Experiment 1) or by having one repeatedly impose her goals on the other (decisional power; Experiment 2). In two subsequent testimony tasks, 3- to 5-year-old children significantly tended to endorse the testimony of the dominant ov...
International audienceAbstractDevelopmental research suggests that young children tend to value domi...
Two experiments with preschoolers (36 to 78 months) and 8-year-old children (Experiment 1, N=173, Ex...
This longitudinal, naturalistic study addressed behavioral and social cognitive processes implicated...
Recent research has shown that young children rely on social cues to evaluate testimony. For instanc...
International audienceRecent research has shown that young children rely on social cuesto evaluate t...
Theories of cultural evolution posit that cues of competence-based prestige, rather than formidabili...
Two important parenting strategies are to impose one's power and to use reasoning. The effect of the...
International audienceAbstractNavigating the social world requires evaluating how others behave, com...
International audienceVery early on, children understand the hierarchical dimension of the social en...
Much of what young children know, they learned from other people. Preschoolers, however, do not trus...
International audienceSeveral studies have investigated how preschoolers weigh socialcues against ep...
Every human society includes social hierarchies-- relationships between individuals and groups of un...
Notwithstanding alternative ways of obtaining power, social power is mostly commonly acquired throug...
Developmental research suggests that young children tend to value dominant individuals over subordin...
International audienceAbstractHierarchy is a recurrent feature of social life. From an early age, ch...
International audienceAbstractDevelopmental research suggests that young children tend to value domi...
Two experiments with preschoolers (36 to 78 months) and 8-year-old children (Experiment 1, N=173, Ex...
This longitudinal, naturalistic study addressed behavioral and social cognitive processes implicated...
Recent research has shown that young children rely on social cues to evaluate testimony. For instanc...
International audienceRecent research has shown that young children rely on social cuesto evaluate t...
Theories of cultural evolution posit that cues of competence-based prestige, rather than formidabili...
Two important parenting strategies are to impose one's power and to use reasoning. The effect of the...
International audienceAbstractNavigating the social world requires evaluating how others behave, com...
International audienceVery early on, children understand the hierarchical dimension of the social en...
Much of what young children know, they learned from other people. Preschoolers, however, do not trus...
International audienceSeveral studies have investigated how preschoolers weigh socialcues against ep...
Every human society includes social hierarchies-- relationships between individuals and groups of un...
Notwithstanding alternative ways of obtaining power, social power is mostly commonly acquired throug...
Developmental research suggests that young children tend to value dominant individuals over subordin...
International audienceAbstractHierarchy is a recurrent feature of social life. From an early age, ch...
International audienceAbstractDevelopmental research suggests that young children tend to value domi...
Two experiments with preschoolers (36 to 78 months) and 8-year-old children (Experiment 1, N=173, Ex...
This longitudinal, naturalistic study addressed behavioral and social cognitive processes implicated...