info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Transgression of cooperative helping norms outweighs children's intergroup bias
Fecha
2020-04Registro en:
González Gadea, María Luz; Santamaria Garcia, Hernando; Aragón, Irina; Santamaría García, José; Herrera, Eduar; et al.; Transgression of cooperative helping norms outweighs children's intergroup bias; Elsevier; Cognitive Development; 54; 4-2020; 1-14
0885-2014
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
González Gadea, María Luz
Santamaria Garcia, Hernando
Aragón, Irina
Santamaría García, José
Herrera, Eduar
Ibañez, Agustin Mariano
Sigman, Mariano
Resumen
Some forms of cooperative helping do not bind people from a moral perspective but ensure the functioning of social groups. Here, we have assessed how children coordinate such nonobligatory social concerns with group identity concerns. We have performed three studies (3–11-years-old; N = 393) aimed at testing children's peer preferences and resource allocation toward neutral individuals that engage in helping and hindering behaviors toward in-group and out-group peers. In Study 1, we have found that, in helping contexts, children prioritized group concerns and exhibited in-group favoritism. In hindering contexts, they privileged helping norms and did not exhibit out-group derogation. In Studies 2 and 3, we have confirmed that transgressions of cooperative helping norms outweighed intergroup bias. Our results suggest that, when cooperative helping norms conflict with group identity concerns, helping norms take priority. When these principles are coextensive and not in conflict, children give priority to group concerns.