Department of Psychology, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton, UK.
Br J Dev Psychol. 2010 Nov;28(Pt 4):799-815. doi: 10.1348/026151009x479475.
The accounts given by those who have violated a rule are likely to have important self-presentational consequences, potentially reducing the negative impact of the breach on social evaluations of transgressors. However, little is known about young children's self-presentational reasoning about such accounts. In the present study, a sample of 120 4- to 9-year-olds responded to rule violation stories where the transgressor uses either an apology, an excuse, or no account. Results showed that whereas children rated both account types similarly in terms of their impact on punishment consequences, even the youngest saw apologies as leading to significantly more positive social evaluation than excuses. Correspondingly, children were more likely to identify prosocial motives for apologies than for excuses, and more likely to identify self-protective motives for excuses than for apologies. Explicit references to self-presentational motives when explaining the accounts increased significantly with age, and were more likely following social-conventional rather than moral rule violations.
那些违反规则的人的陈述可能会产生重要的自我表现后果,有可能减轻违规行为对违规者社会评价的负面影响。然而,对于年幼的孩子关于这种陈述的自我表现推理,我们知之甚少。在本研究中,一个由 120 名 4 至 9 岁儿童组成的样本对违规故事做出了反应,其中违规者使用了道歉、借口或没有解释。结果表明,尽管孩子们在惩罚后果方面对两种解释类型的评价相似,但即使是最小的孩子也认为道歉比借口会导致更积极的社会评价。相应地,孩子们更有可能将亲社会动机归因于道歉,而不是借口,并且更有可能将自我保护动机归因于借口,而不是道歉。在解释这些解释时,明确提到自我表现动机与年龄显著相关,并且更有可能在社会常规违规之后,而不是在道德规则违规之后。