Publication | Open Access
Four- and 5-Year-Olds Infer Differences in Relative Ability and Appropriately Allocate Roles to Achieve Cooperative, Competitive, and Prosocial Goals
20
Citations
70
References
2018
Year
5-Year-olds Infer DifferencesEducationPreschool DevelopmentRelative AbilityExternal ResourcesPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyRole AllocationInternal ResourcesCognitive DevelopmentSocial-emotional DevelopmentChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceSocial SkillsEarly Childhood DevelopmentInfant CognitionSocial CognitionChild DevelopmentEarly EducationAchieve CooperativeSocial BehaviorDevelopmental ScienceIntergroup Cooperation
Preschoolers are sensitive to differences in individuals’ access to external resources (e.g., tools) in division of labor tasks. However, little is known about whether children consider differences in individuals’ internal resources (e.g., abilities) and whether children can flexibly allocate roles across different goal contexts. Critically, factors that are relevant to role allocation in collaborative contexts may be irrelevant in competitive and prosocial ones. In three preregistered experiments, we found that 4- and 5-year-olds (mean: 54 months; range: 42–66 months; N = 132) used age differences to infer relative ability and appropriately allocate the harder and easier of two tasks in a dyadic cooperative interaction (Experiment 1), and appropriately ignored relative ability in competitive (Experiment 2) and prosocial (Experiment 3) contexts, instead assigning others the harder and easier roles, respectively. Thus, 3-and-a-half- to 5-year-olds evaluate their own abilities relative to others and effectively allocate roles to achieve diverse goals.
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