Child Dev. 2014 May-Jun;85(3):1134-49. doi: 10.1111/cdev.12195.
Children (n = 133, aged 8–13) were interviewed about helping situations that systematically varied in recipient’s need for help and the costs for the helper. In situations where helping a peer involved low costs, children perceived a moral obligation to help that was independent of peer norms, parental authority, and reciprocity considerations. When helping a peer involved high costs this over powered the perceived obligation to help, but only in situations involving low need and when in line with reciprocity. When both need and costs were high, younger children expressed stronger moral indignation while older children were less negative and reasoned in terms of other solutions. Furthermore, stronger moral indignation was related to more advanced social perspective taking skills when need and costs were high.
研究访谈了 133 名 8-13 岁的儿童,涉及他们在帮助同伴时对各种不同情境的判断,这些情境在受助者的需求和帮助者的付出成本方面存在系统差异。在帮助同伴的成本较低的情况下,儿童认为帮助同伴是一种独立于同伴规范、父母权威和互惠考虑的道德义务。而当帮助同伴的成本较高时,这种感知到的帮助义务会被压倒,但这种情况只出现在涉及低需求和符合互惠原则的情况下。当需求和成本都很高时,年幼的孩子表现出更强烈的道德义愤,而年长的孩子则不那么消极,并从其他解决方案的角度进行推理。此外,当需求和成本都很高时,更强的道德义愤与更高级的社会观点采择技能相关。