| Literature DB >> 28620328 |
Zhen Wu1, Zhen Zhang2,3, Rui Guo1, Julie Gros-Louis4.
Abstract
Research has demonstrated that prosocial sharing is emotionally rewarding, which leads to further prosocial actions; such a positive feedback loop suggests a proximal mechanism of human's tendency to act prosocially. However, it leaves open a question as to how the emotional benefits from sharing develop in young children and whether sharing under pressure promotes happiness as well. The current study directly compared 3- and 5-year-old Chinese children's happiness when sharing was autonomous (the recipient did not contribute to getting the reward) with when sharing was obligated (the recipient and the actor jointly earned the reward). We found that children shared more items overall when sharing was obligated than autonomous, demonstrating their conformity to social norms of merit-based sharing. In children who eventually shared with others, 5-year-olds gave out more stickers in the obligated sharing condition than in the autonomous sharing condition, but 3-year-olds shared the same amount between the conditions, suggesting that 5-year-olds adhered to the merit-based sharing norm more strictly than 3-year-olds. Moreover, in the autonomous sharing condition, children displayed greater happiness when they shared with the recipient than when they kept stickers for themselves, suggesting that costly prosocial giving benefited children with positive mood; however, children did not gain happiness when they shared with the recipient in the obligated sharing condition. These findings demonstrate that children's affective benefits depend on the motivation underlying their prosocial behavior, and further imply that normative force and emotional gains may independently drive preschoolers' prosocial behaviors.Entities:
Keywords: happiness; preschooler; prosocial behavior; sharing; social norm
Year: 2017 PMID: 28620328 PMCID: PMC5450223 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00867
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Means (standard deviation in parentheses) of children’s sharing behavior as a function of age and condition.
| Age 3 | Age 5 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Autonomous | Obligated | Autonomous | Obligated | |
| Mean number of stickers shared overalla | 0.81 (1.21) | 1.25 (1.33) | 1.12 (1.07) | 2.04 (1.13) |
| Proportion of children who did not share at all | 66.67% | 37.5% | 32.56% | 13.33% |
| Proportion of children who shared stickers | 33.33% | 62.5% | 67.44% | 86.67% |
| Proportion of children who shared less than half | 18.52% | 45.83% | 48.84% | 40% |
| Proportion of children who shared halfb | 14.81% | 16.67% | 18.60% | 46.67% |
| Mean number of stickers shared in children who shareda | 2.44 (0.53) | 2.00 (1.13) | 1.66 (0.90) | 2.36 (0.84) |