| Literature DB >> 25914671 |
Kristin Rostad1, Penny M Pexman1.
Abstract
We examined the ability of preschool-aged children to identify conflicting, or ambivalent, desire states (e.g., "I want to go to the birthday party because there will be cake, but I also don't want to go because I'm having fun playing at home"). Participants were 4- and 5-year-old children, and a group of undergraduate students (n = 20 in each age group). They were presented with 14 scenarios involving both "single desire" and "dual desire" states, including both approach (i.e., "want") and avoidance (i.e., "not want") desires. Our primary interest was children's ability to identify concurrent conflicting "dual desire" states, and this ability was found in most of the 5-year-old age group tested and in about half of the 4-year-old age group. As such, these results provide evidence that children can identify ambivalence at earlier ages than previously reported. In addition, results showed that the challenge in recognizing ambivalence is the presence of desires of opposite valence directed at the same target.Entities:
Keywords: ambivalence; approach/avoidance; conflicting desires; desire reasoning; ulysses conflict
Year: 2015 PMID: 25914671 PMCID: PMC4392292 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1Example of test display for the candy story theme, with main character, thought bubble, and response image magnets.
Example of desire appreciation conditions using the candy story theme.
| “Approach” condition | “Avoidance” condition | “Approach/Approach” condition |
|---|---|---|
| This is David. David wants to eat candy right now because his sister brought home a bag of candy from school and it has David's favorite candy in it. David's favorite candy are lollipops, and he really likes the strawberry ones. | This is Karen. Karen does not want to eat candy right now because she got a tummy ache the last time she ate candy. Karen's tummy ache lasted for 2 days, and she still remembers how bad it felt. | This is Alex. Alex wants to eat candy right now because his sister brought home a bag of candy from school and it has Alex's favorite candy in it. Alex's favorite candy are lollipops, and he really likes the strawberry ones. Alex also wants to drink pop right now because his dad just brought home orange pop from the grocery store. Orange pop is Alex's favorite pop, so it's a special treat. |
| This is Brenda. Brenda does not want to eat candy right now because she got a tummy ache the last time she ate candy. Brenda's tummy ache lasted for 2 days, and she still remembers how bad it felt. Brenda also does not want to eat chips right now because they only have dill pickle and that is the flavor she hates the most. Brenda doesn't like real pickles either, but hates dill pickle flavored chips even more. | This is Martin. Martin wants to eat candy right now because his sister brought home a bag of candy from school and it has Martin's favorite candy in it. Martin's favorite candy are lollipops, and he really likes the strawberry ones. Martin also does not want to eat chips right now because they only have dill pickle and that is the flavor he hates the most. Martin doesn't like real pickles either, but hates dill pickle flavored chips even more. | This is Michelle. Michelle wants to eat candy right now because her sister brought home a bag of candy from school and it has Michelle's favorite candy in it. Michelle's favorite candy are lollipops, and she really likes the strawberry ones. Michelle also does not want to eat candy right now because she got a tummy ache the last time she ate candy. Michelle's tummy ache lasted for 2 days, and she still remembers how bad it felt. |
FIGURE 2Proportion correct scores for the desire appreciation task as a function of condition and age group. App = “Approach” condition. Av = “Avoidance” condition. App/App = “Approach/Approach” condition. Av/Av = “Avoidance/Avoidance” condition. Bars represent standard errors.