Michaelson Laura E, Munakata Yuko
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Colorado Boulder, USA.
Dev Sci. 2016 Nov;19(6):1011-1019. doi: 10.1111/desc.12388. Epub 2016 Jan 21.
Holding out for a delayed reward in the face of temptation is notoriously difficult, and the ability to do so in childhood predicts diverse indices of life success. Prominent explanations focus on the importance of cognitive control. However, delaying gratification may also require trust in people delivering future rewards as promised. Only limited experimental work has tested this idea, and such studies with children were focused on general reward expectations, so evidence was ambiguous as to whether social trust played a role. The present study provides the first targeted test of a role for social trust in children's willingness to delay gratification. Children observed an adult behave in either a trustworthy or untrustworthy manner toward another adult, then were tested in the classic delay of gratification task by that adult. Children were less likely to wait the full delay period, and waited less time overall, for a reward promised by an untrustworthy adult, relative to children tested by a trustworthy adult. These findings demonstrate that manipulations of social trust influence delaying gratification, and highlight intriguing alternative reasons to test for individual differences in delaying gratification and associated life outcomes.
面对诱惑时等待延迟奖励是出了名的困难,而在童年时期做到这一点的能力预示着生活成功的各种指标。突出的解释集中在认知控制的重要性上。然而,延迟满足也可能需要信任那些按承诺提供未来奖励的人。只有有限的实验工作检验了这一观点,而且此类针对儿童的研究集中在一般的奖励期望上,因此关于社会信任是否发挥作用的证据并不明确。本研究首次有针对性地测试了社会信任在儿童延迟满足意愿中的作用。孩子们观察一个成年人对另一个成年人表现出值得信赖或不值得信赖的行为,然后由该成年人在经典的延迟满足任务中对他们进行测试。相对于由值得信赖的成年人进行测试的孩子,由不值得信赖的成年人承诺奖励时,孩子们不太可能等待整个延迟期,总体等待时间也更短。这些发现表明,社会信任的操纵会影响延迟满足,并突出了测试延迟满足及相关生活结果个体差异的有趣替代原因。