This study aimed to examine the extent to which children's sociometric status is related to the use of trait information. Therefore, 99 children (aged 4-6) were asked to make inferences about protagonists' future actions when positive or negative trait information was given. Results showed that rejected children were less affected by the protagonist's trait information than their more popular peers (average and popular) in both conditions. As well as their frequently reported hostile bias, rejected children also showed a positive bias. This suggests a general delay in social reasoning among rejected children, but can also be explained by a difference in their development of social cognition based on their atypical daily interactions. Copyri...
Bibliography: pages [80]-85.The present study investigated children's ability to use trait informati...
This study examined how social reality restricts children’s tendency for in-group favoritism in grou...
Contains fulltext : 201948.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Lack of awarene...
This study aimed to examine the extent to which children’s sociometric status is related to the use ...
Two important sources of information for social judgments are personality dispositions (traits) and ...
Two studies compared popular and rejected children's reasoning regarding social interactions involvi...
Two studies compared popular and rejected children's reasoning regarding social interactions involvi...
Previous research indicates that children hold negative beliefs about peers with foreign accents, ph...
Children's attributions about story characters in ambiguous and unambiguous social situations were a...
Two studies compared popular and rejected children’s reasoning regarding social interactions involvi...
Being rejected by peers has devastating consequences for a child’s future social-cognitive developme...
269 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1981.Despite the large number of s...
Two experiments examined three- to six-year-olds' use of frequency and intention information to make...
Typescript (photocopy).Aggressive/rejected and nonaggressive/accepted boys' attributions concerning ...
286 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1982.Research on social isolation ...
Bibliography: pages [80]-85.The present study investigated children's ability to use trait informati...
This study examined how social reality restricts children’s tendency for in-group favoritism in grou...
Contains fulltext : 201948.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Lack of awarene...
This study aimed to examine the extent to which children’s sociometric status is related to the use ...
Two important sources of information for social judgments are personality dispositions (traits) and ...
Two studies compared popular and rejected children's reasoning regarding social interactions involvi...
Two studies compared popular and rejected children's reasoning regarding social interactions involvi...
Previous research indicates that children hold negative beliefs about peers with foreign accents, ph...
Children's attributions about story characters in ambiguous and unambiguous social situations were a...
Two studies compared popular and rejected children’s reasoning regarding social interactions involvi...
Being rejected by peers has devastating consequences for a child’s future social-cognitive developme...
269 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1981.Despite the large number of s...
Two experiments examined three- to six-year-olds' use of frequency and intention information to make...
Typescript (photocopy).Aggressive/rejected and nonaggressive/accepted boys' attributions concerning ...
286 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1982.Research on social isolation ...
Bibliography: pages [80]-85.The present study investigated children's ability to use trait informati...
This study examined how social reality restricts children’s tendency for in-group favoritism in grou...
Contains fulltext : 201948.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Lack of awarene...