As part of their “essentialist” intuitions, young children tend to form personal attributions for observed intergroup differences – attributing them to groups’ intrinsic natures or inborn characteristics. Much research has linked this essentialist view of social groups with prejudiced attitudes. However, less research has explored children’s capacity to form structural attributions for observed intergroup differences – attributing them to groups’ extrinsic circumstances or access to opportunities – or how structural attributions relate to social attitudes. Structural attributions could enable children to view low-status groups as extrinsically disadvantaged rather than intrinsically inferior. We were interested in whether verbally highlight...
How does prejudice impact social groupings in our youth? Our current understanding of cognitive deve...
This study aimed to examine the extent to which children's sociometric status is related to the use ...
Although some jealous children respond to outsider interference in friendships with problem solving ...
A wide literature demonstrates people’s early-emerging “essentialist” tendency to attribute observed...
In an effort to better understand the cognitive and emotional self-perceptions of rejected children,...
This study examined how social reality restricts children’s tendency for in-group favoritism in grou...
Abrams, Rutland, Palmer, Ferrell, and Pelletier (2014) showed that better second-order mental state ...
Children's attributions about story characters in ambiguous and unambiguous social situations were a...
Previous research indicates that children hold negative beliefs about peers with foreign accents, ph...
Some children are prone to interpret others’ behavior as stemming from hostile intentions, even when...
Some children are prone to interpret others’ behavior as stemming from hostile intentions, even when...
This article presents a developmental science approach to changing attitudes and rectifying prejudic...
In recent years, research has demonstrated that the basic features of prejudice and discrimination e...
The consensusfrom the developmental literature examining children 's intergroup at-titudes has ...
This is the authors' accepted manuscript, post-peer review. The publisher's official version is avai...
How does prejudice impact social groupings in our youth? Our current understanding of cognitive deve...
This study aimed to examine the extent to which children's sociometric status is related to the use ...
Although some jealous children respond to outsider interference in friendships with problem solving ...
A wide literature demonstrates people’s early-emerging “essentialist” tendency to attribute observed...
In an effort to better understand the cognitive and emotional self-perceptions of rejected children,...
This study examined how social reality restricts children’s tendency for in-group favoritism in grou...
Abrams, Rutland, Palmer, Ferrell, and Pelletier (2014) showed that better second-order mental state ...
Children's attributions about story characters in ambiguous and unambiguous social situations were a...
Previous research indicates that children hold negative beliefs about peers with foreign accents, ph...
Some children are prone to interpret others’ behavior as stemming from hostile intentions, even when...
Some children are prone to interpret others’ behavior as stemming from hostile intentions, even when...
This article presents a developmental science approach to changing attitudes and rectifying prejudic...
In recent years, research has demonstrated that the basic features of prejudice and discrimination e...
The consensusfrom the developmental literature examining children 's intergroup at-titudes has ...
This is the authors' accepted manuscript, post-peer review. The publisher's official version is avai...
How does prejudice impact social groupings in our youth? Our current understanding of cognitive deve...
This study aimed to examine the extent to which children's sociometric status is related to the use ...
Although some jealous children respond to outsider interference in friendships with problem solving ...