Recent research has found that even preschoolers give more resources to others who have previously given resources to them, but the psychological bases of this reciprocity are unknown. In our study, a puppet distributed resources between herself and a child by taking some from a pile in front of the child or else by giving some from a pile in front of herself. Although the resulting distributions were identical, three- and five-year-olds reciprocated less generously when the puppet had taken rather than given resources. This suggests that children's judgments about resource distribution are more about the social intentions of the distributor and the social framing of the distributional act than about the amount of resources obtained. In ord...
This study investigated how the presence of others and anticipated distributions for self influence ...
This study investigated how the presence of others and anticipated distributions for self influence ...
Recent studies have provided evidence that young children already engage in sharing behavior. The un...
<div><p>Recent research has found that even preschoolers give more resources to others who have prev...
Recent research has found that even preschoolers give more resources to others who have previously g...
Whether children share in anticipation of future benefits returned by a partner is an interesting qu...
Children at age 6 years differentially treat kin, friends, and strangers in resource allocation game...
Two studies investigated the influence of external rewards and social praise in young children's fai...
Children distribute resources to recipients differentially regarding various factors such as ‘need’ ...
Non-windfall approaches to sharing demonstrate pre-schoolers' sensitivity to merit-based distributio...
This study aimed to assess social preferences in dynamic interpersonal interactions among preschool ...
Previous studies have revealed that preschoolers selectively allocate their resources based on their...
The present study examined how 2- to 4-year-old preschoolers in Singapore (N = 202) balance fairness...
Young children engage in direct reciprocity, but the mechanisms underlying such reciprocity remain u...
Young children make sophisticated social and normative inferences based on proportional reasoning. W...
This study investigated how the presence of others and anticipated distributions for self influence ...
This study investigated how the presence of others and anticipated distributions for self influence ...
Recent studies have provided evidence that young children already engage in sharing behavior. The un...
<div><p>Recent research has found that even preschoolers give more resources to others who have prev...
Recent research has found that even preschoolers give more resources to others who have previously g...
Whether children share in anticipation of future benefits returned by a partner is an interesting qu...
Children at age 6 years differentially treat kin, friends, and strangers in resource allocation game...
Two studies investigated the influence of external rewards and social praise in young children's fai...
Children distribute resources to recipients differentially regarding various factors such as ‘need’ ...
Non-windfall approaches to sharing demonstrate pre-schoolers' sensitivity to merit-based distributio...
This study aimed to assess social preferences in dynamic interpersonal interactions among preschool ...
Previous studies have revealed that preschoolers selectively allocate their resources based on their...
The present study examined how 2- to 4-year-old preschoolers in Singapore (N = 202) balance fairness...
Young children engage in direct reciprocity, but the mechanisms underlying such reciprocity remain u...
Young children make sophisticated social and normative inferences based on proportional reasoning. W...
This study investigated how the presence of others and anticipated distributions for self influence ...
This study investigated how the presence of others and anticipated distributions for self influence ...
Recent studies have provided evidence that young children already engage in sharing behavior. The un...