Vrijen Charlotte, Ackermans Mégane Alice, Bosma Anna, Kretschmer Tina
Faculty of Behavioural and Social Sciences, University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2020 Sep 24;9(9):e18902. doi: 10.2196/18902.
There is evidence that reward responsiveness and optimism are associated with mental and social functioning in adolescence and adulthood, but it is unknown if this is also the case for young children. Part of the reason for this gap in the literature is that the instruments that are used to assess reward responsiveness and optimism in adolescents and adults are usually not suitable for young children.
Two behavioral tasks to assess reward learning, a questionnaire on reward responsiveness, and a questionnaire on optimism/pessimism will be tested on their feasibility and reliability in children aged 6-7. Depending on their feasibility and reliability, these instruments will also be used to investigate if reward responsiveness and optimism are associated with mental and social functioning in young children.
For this cross-sectional pilot study, we adapted a number of tasks and questionnaires to the needs of 6-7-year-old children, by simplification of items, oral rather than written assessment, and reducing the number of conditions and items. We will approach teachers and, with their help, aim to include 70 children aged 6-7 to assess the feasibility and reliability of the tasks and questionnaires. Feasibility measures that will be reported are the proportion of children completing the task/questionnaire, the proportion of children that were able to explain the instructions in their own words to the researcher, and the proportion of children that correctly answered the control questions. The reliability of the scales will be assessed by computing Cronbach α and item-total score correlations and the reliability of the tasks by correlations between different consecutive blocks of trials. Ethics approval was obtained from the Ethics Committee of the Department of Pedagogy and Educational Sciences.
Data collection was originally planned in March and April 2020, but has been postponed due to Corona virus regulations. We expect to collect the data in the first half of 2021. The findings will be disseminated in preprints and peer-reviewed publications.
The development of feasible and reliable instruments for assessing reward responsiveness and optimism in young children is expected to benefit future research on underlying mechanisms of mental and social functioning in young children. If the instruments assessed in this study are usable with young children, it would be particularly interesting to include them in cohort studies because this would enable investigating not only concurrent associations, but also prospective associations between reward responsiveness and optimism early in life and mental and social functioning later in life. If, as we hypothesize, reward responsiveness and optimism are not only associated with (prospective) mental and social functioning in adults and adolescents but also in young children, this could provide a way of identifying vulnerable children already at an early stage.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): PRR1-10.2196/18902.
有证据表明,奖励反应性和乐观主义与青少年及成年人的心理和社会功能相关,但对于幼儿而言情况是否如此尚不清楚。文献中存在这一差距的部分原因在于,用于评估青少年和成年人奖励反应性和乐观主义的工具通常不适用于幼儿。
将对两项评估奖励学习的行为任务、一份奖励反应性问卷以及一份乐观主义/悲观主义问卷在6至7岁儿童中的可行性和可靠性进行测试。根据其可行性和可靠性,这些工具还将用于调查奖励反应性和乐观主义是否与幼儿的心理和社会功能相关。
对于这项横断面试点研究,我们通过简化项目、采用口头而非书面评估以及减少条件和项目数量,使多项任务和问卷适应6至7岁儿童的需求。我们将联系教师,并在他们的帮助下,目标纳入70名6至7岁儿童,以评估任务和问卷的可行性和可靠性。将报告的可行性指标包括完成任务/问卷的儿童比例、能够用自己的话向研究人员解释说明的儿童比例以及正确回答控制问题的儿童比例。量表的信度将通过计算克朗巴哈α系数和项目总分相关性来评估,任务的信度将通过不同连续试验块之间的相关性来评估。已获得教育与教育科学系伦理委员会的伦理批准。
数据收集原计划于2020年3月和4月进行,但由于新冠病毒相关规定而推迟。我们预计在2021年上半年收集数据。研究结果将在预印本和同行评审出版物中传播。
开发用于评估幼儿奖励反应性和乐观主义的可行且可靠的工具,预计将有益于未来关于幼儿心理和社会功能潜在机制的研究。如果本研究中评估的工具适用于幼儿,将其纳入队列研究将特别有趣,因为这不仅能够调查同时期的关联,还能调查生命早期的奖励反应性和乐观主义与生命后期的心理和社会功能之间的前瞻性关联。如果正如我们所假设的,奖励反应性和乐观主义不仅与成年人和青少年(前瞻性)的心理和社会功能相关,也与幼儿相关,那么这可能提供一种在早期阶段识别易受影响儿童的方法。
国际注册报告识别号(IRRID):PRR1-10.2196/18902