| Literature DB >> 30028865 |
Koviljka Barisnikov1, Fleur Lejeune1.
Abstract
Social knowledge refers to the ability to analyze and reason about social situations in relation to social rules which are essential to the development of social skills and social behavior. The present research aimed to assess these abilities with the "Social resolution task" in a neurotypical population of 351 children (4 to 12 years) and 39 young adults, and in 20 participants (10 to 18 years) with Down syndrome. Results showed that young children aged 4 to 6 were well able to distinguish between appropriate and inappropriate social behavior but they had significantly more difficulties in judging and identifying social cues for the transgression of conventional rules than for moral ones. Between age 4 and 8, their social reasoning was mainly based on factual answers, while older children showed significantly more social awareness, making more reference to emotional and social consequences for the "victims". The representation of a more universal applicability of social rules seemed to develop later in childhood, as of age 8. In contrast, participants with Down syndrome exhibited significantly more difficulties in judging, identifying and reasoning about transgression of social rules without social awareness. In conclusion, the results have shown that social reasoning abilities develop throughout childhood. Social awareness seems to have a long developmental course, which includes a sensibility about welfare and intersubjectivity, critical for the development of prosocial behavior. The clinical population with difficulties in social interaction and socio-emotional behavior could benefit from an early assessment and from learning social reasoning abilities to improve social skills.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30028865 PMCID: PMC6054403 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200932
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Example of pictures for the Social Resolution Task (SRT).
Brief description of the different levels of answers for the third question (social reasoning score).
| Category (points) | Brief description | Example: a boy falls in the mud in front of a girl and she laughs |
|---|---|---|
| Irrelevant (0) | Incorrect or inappropriate answer | “She pushed him in the mud, it's mean” |
| Factual (2) | Description of the scene without social awareness | “the boy falls in the mud and the girl laughs” |
| Intersubjective (5) | Answer based on causality relations with social awareness | “The boy will be embarrassed because she laughs” |
| Conceptual (7) | Answer based on conceptual knowledge of conventional or moral rules | “We do not make fun of someone in a difficult situation” |
Participants’ characteristics.
| Age group | N | Age; M(SD) | Gender ; % girls | EVIP-R; M(SD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 years | 39 | 4.58 (0.2) | 46.2 | 55.9 (17) |
| 5 years | 39 | 5.44 (0.35) | 56.4 | 66.8 (15.6) |
| 6 years | 39 | 6.51 (0.3) | 41 | 85.7 (18.4) |
| 7 years | 39 | 7.44 (0.26) | 46.2 | 95.5 (18.7) |
| 8 years | 39 | 8.36 (0.32) | 48.7 | 103.6 (15.9) |
| 9 years | 39 | 9.48 (0.3) | 53.8 | 115.5 (12.1) |
| 10 years | 39 | 10.47 (0.34) | 43.6 | 115.4 (15.5) |
| 11 years | 39 | 11.5 (0.33) | 56.4 | 127.5 (16.3) |
| 12 years | 39 | 12.41 (0.24) | 43.6 | 135.3 (12.2) |
| Adults | 39 | 24.29 (3.21) | 76.9 | 166.7 (5.8) |
Mean scores (percentage) and standard deviations for the SRT scores according to age group and social rule.
| Age group | Global SRT | Q1 : Judgement | Q2 : Identification | Q3 : Social Reasoning | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Appropriate | Inappropriate | Appropriate | Inappropriate | |||||
| Moral | Conventional | Moral | Conventional | |||||
| 4 years | 50.9 (6.3) | 84.6 (22.7) | 86.2 (17.9) | 73.7 (22.9) | 74.4 (25.5) | 76.9 (19.8) | 67.3 (23.8) | 27.5 (8.8) |
| 5 years | 56.2 (8.4) | 89.2 (23.3) | 93.3 (12.4) | 87.2 (16.1) | 88.2 (22.3) | 88.2 (17.6) | 83.3 (19.3) | 32 (11.4) |
| 6 years | 60.8 (9.3) | 97.4 (6.8) | 93.8 (11.4) | 96.2 (9.1) | 91.3 (18.2) | 89.7 (13.7) | 93.6 (11.1) | 38 (16.2) |
| 7 years | 62.5 (8.3) | 97.4 (6.8) | 96.9 (8.6) | 95.5 (9.7) | 97.4 (6.8) | 95.4 (8.5) | 92.9 (12.8) | 39.4 (13.1) |
| 8 years | 65.2 (6.7) | 98.5 (7.1) | 95.9 (10.4) | 96.8 (8.5) | 97.9 (7.7) | 95.4 (10.7) | 96.8 (8.5) | 43.3 (11.5) |
| 9 years | 68.7 (7.8) | 100 (0) | 98.5 (5.4) | 96.8 (8.5) | 99.5 (3.2) | 97.4 (6.8) | 92.9 (11.4) | 48.6 (12.9) |
| 10 years | 67.9 (8.3) | 100 (0) | 99.5 (3.2) | 98.7 (5.6) | 99.5 (3.2) | 99.5 (3.2) | 98.1 (6.7) | 47.1 (13.6) |
| 11 years | 73.1 (7.7) | 99.5 (3.2) | 99.5 (3.2) | 97.4 (7.7) | 99.5 (3.2) | 97.4 (6.8) | 95.5 (9.7) | 56 (12.4) |
| 12 years | 75.5 (8.5) | 98.5 (5.4) | 100 (0) | 96.8 (8.5) | 98.5 (5.4) | 98.5 (5.4) | 96.8 (8.5) | 60.2 (14) |
| Adults | 87.5 (7.7) | 98.5 (5.4) | 99 (4.5) | 96.2 (9.1) | 97.9 (6.1) | 98.5 (5.4) | 94.9 (11.7) | 80.6 (12) |
Fig 2Mean social reasoning scores (percentage) and standard errors, according to age group (age 4 to adults) and to the category of responses (irrelevant, factual, intersubjective, conceptual).
Mean scores (percentage) and standard deviations for the SRT scores according to the population.
| Group | Global SRT | Q1: Judgement | Q2: Identification | Q3: Social Reasoning | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Appropriate | Inappropriate | Appropriate | Inappropriate | |||
| NT group | 54.3 (7.4) | 88 (15.1) | 86.1 (13.4) | 86 (16) | 83.9 (13.7) | 30.3 (14) |
| DS group | 41.8 (11) | 70 (35.2) | 73.3 (25.3) | 59 (31.4) | 60.6 (24) | 17.8 (11.1) |
Fig 3Mean social reasoning scores (percentage) and standard errors, according to the group and to the category of responses.