| Literature DB >> 27785125 |
Abstract
Social interactions about transgressions provide a context for the development of children's moral aversion to harming others. This study investigated mothers' insistence when communicating the prohibition against harming others to infants in everyday home interactions. Mothers' reactions to infants' use of force against others (moral harm transgressions) were compared to their reactions to transgressions pertaining to infant wellbeing (prudential) and transgressions pertaining to inconvenience (pragmatic). Twenty-six infants and their families participated in 2.5-h naturalistic home observations when infants were 14, 19, and 24 months old. Mothers' interventions on moral harm transgressions involved increased use of physical interventions and direct commands, and decreased use of distractions, softening interventions, and relenting/compromising, compared to their interventions on prudential and pragmatic transgressions. Children showed the greatest immediate compliance with, and least protests against, maternal interventions on moral harm transgressions.Entities:
Keywords: moral development; mother–infant interactions; naturalistic interactions; social domain theory; transgressions
Year: 2016 PMID: 27785125 PMCID: PMC5059490 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01448
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
List of maternal intervention codes.
| Code | Definition |
|---|---|
| Physical intervention | Use of force to stop or prevent child from transgressing. |
| Direct command | Explicit command telling the child to alter behavior, including second-person imperative verb form (“Don’t hit your brother,” “Put the scissors down”). |
| Indirect command | Suggestive or mild command telling the child to alter behavior, including first-person plural imperative (“Let’s not play with that”) or question (“Do you want to give me the scissors?”). |
| Softening | Acknowledgment of infant’s desire, attempt to comfort the child, proposal of compromise, term of endearment (e.g., “honey”). |
| Distraction | Attempt to draw child’s attention to something other than the prohibited behavior. |
| Verbal explanation | Verbal statement indicating why a given behavior was wrong. |
| Disorder | Potential or actual disorder or property damage, including mess or spilling (e.g., “Look at this mess”). |
| Evaluation | Evaluative statement about act (e.g., “That’s not very nice”) |
| Feelings/desires | Potential or actual feelings or desires of another person (excluding pain or harm, e.g., “That’s annoying me”). |
| Harm to child | Potential or actual harm to the child (e.g., “You’ll hurt yourself”). |
| Harm to others | Potential or actual harm to another person (e.g., “That’ll hurt your sister”). |
| Property ownership | Ownership of object (e.g., “That’s mommy’s cup”). |
| Rule | Wrongness of act described on a general level (“We don’t run in the stairs”). |
| Sanction | Potential or actual sanction against the child (“One more and you’ll get a time-out”). |
| Other reason | Any reason not fitting into the above categories (“We’re going to go to Grandpa’s house now”). |
Content of explanation as a function of situation type.
| Situation type | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Moral harm | Prudential | Pragmatic | |
| Disorder | 0.00a | 0.04a | 0.25b*** |
| Evaluation | 0.13 | 0.21 | 0.16 |
| Feelings/desires | 0.00 | 0.05 | 0.07 |
| Harm to child | 0.00a | 0.44b | 0.01a*** |
| Harm to others | 0.63a | 0.00b | 0.01b*** |
| Property ownership | 0.02 | 0.01 | 0.05 |
| Rule | 0.11 | 0.17 | 0.11 |
| Sanction | 0.09 | 0.06 | 0.05 |
| Other reason | 0.20a | 0.29a,b | 0.45b*** |
Overview of findings on forms of insistence.
| Situation Type | Situation effect | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moral | Prudential | Pragmatic | ||
| Physical interventions | 0.31 | 0.31 | 0.21 | – |
| *** | ||||
| Direct commands | 0.78 | 0.75 | 0.70 | – |
| *** | ||||
| Distraction | 0.04a | 0.11b | 11b | ∗ |
| Softening | ||||
| 0.08a | 0.41b | 0.51b | ** | |
| 0.14a | 0.27b | 0.22a,b | * | |
| Compromise/relenting | 0.03a | 0.07b | 0.10b | *** |