Sobel David M, Blankenship Jayd, Yockel Mary Rose, Kamper David G
CLPS Department, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Dev Sci. 2023 May;26(3):e13329. doi: 10.1111/desc.13329. Epub 2022 Oct 17.
Numerous studies have documented children's understanding of fairness through their ability to rectify inequities when distributing resources to others. Understanding fairness, however, involves more than just applying norms of equity when distributing resources. Children must also navigate situations in which resources are collected from them for a common good. The developmental origins and the trajectory of equitable resource collection are understudied in the literature on children's prosocial behavior. Experiment 1 presented 4- to 8-year-olds (N = 130) with characters who started with different amounts of resources that were available for both personal use and a group project in school. Participants were asked how a teacher should fairly collect resources from the two characters, contrasting the teacher taking the same amount of resources from each individual (preserving the inequity) or leaving each individual with the same amount of resources (rectifying the inequity). Four- and 5-year-olds responded randomly; 6- to 8-year-olds preferred to rectify the inequity. Experiment 2 reproduced this finding on a new group of 5- to 7-year-olds (N = 69), eliciting justifications for their choice. Justifications in terms of fairness related to equitable choices. Experiment 3 reproduced this finding again in a new group of 5- to 7-year-olds (N = 77), contrasting children's preference for equitable resource collection with that of resource distribution. Children were more likely to rectify an inequity when collecting resources than when distributing resources to individuals who started with an inequity. This difference was driven more by the younger children in the sample. We discuss potential mechanisms for these findings in terms of children's developing concepts of fairness. RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS: Across three experiments, children developed preferences for equitable collection of resources by age 6. Preferences for equitable resource collection were more likely to be justified by appealing to concepts of fairness. Although preferences for equitable resource collection emerged slightly before equitable resource distribution, these data suggest children develop a unified mechanism for prosocial resource allocation.
众多研究记录了儿童在向他人分配资源时通过纠正不公平现象来理解公平的能力。然而,理解公平不仅仅涉及在分配资源时应用公平规范。儿童还必须应对为了共同利益而从他们那里收集资源的情况。在关于儿童亲社会行为的文献中,公平资源收集的发展起源和轨迹尚未得到充分研究。实验1向4至8岁的儿童(N = 130)展示了一些角色,这些角色一开始拥有不同数量的资源,这些资源可用于个人使用和学校的一个小组项目。参与者被问到老师应该如何公平地从这两个角色那里收集资源,对比老师从每个个体那里拿走相同数量的资源(维持不公平)或让每个个体留下相同数量的资源(纠正不公平)。4岁和5岁的儿童随机作答;6至8岁的儿童更倾向于纠正不公平。实验2在一组新的5至7岁儿童(N = 69)中重现了这一发现,并引出了他们选择的理由。与公平选择相关的公平理由。实验3在一组新的5至7岁儿童(N = 77)中再次重现了这一发现,对比了儿童对公平资源收集的偏好与资源分配的偏好。与向一开始就存在不公平的个体分配资源相比时,儿童在收集资源时更有可能纠正不公平。样本中的年幼儿童对这种差异的影响更大。我们从儿童公平观念的发展角度讨论了这些发现的潜在机制。研究亮点:在三项实验中,儿童在6岁时形成了对公平收集资源的偏好。对公平资源收集的偏好更有可能通过诉诸公平概念来证明其合理性。尽管对公平资源收集的偏好比公平资源分配的偏好出现得稍早,但这些数据表明儿童形成了一种统一的亲社会资源分配机制。