Baharloo Roya, Vasil Ny, Ellwood-Lowe Monica E, Srinivasan Mahesh
Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA.
Department of Psychology, California State University East Bay, Hayward, California, USA.
Dev Sci. 2023 May;26(3):e13333. doi: 10.1111/desc.13333. Epub 2022 Oct 21.
Young children often endorse stereotypes-such as "girls are bad at math." We explore one mechanism through which these beliefs may be transmitted: via pragmatic inference. Specifically, we ask whether preschoolers and adults can learn about an unmentioned social group from what is said about another group, and if this inferential process is sensitive to the context of the utterance. Sixty-three- to five-year-old children and fifty-five adults were introduced to two novel social groups-Stripeys and Dotties-and witnessed a speaker praising abilities of one group (e.g., "the Stripeys are good at building chairs"). To examine the effect of context, we compared situations where the speaker was knowledgeable about the abilities of both groups, and had been queried about the performance of both groups (broad context), versus situations where the speaker was only knowledgeable about one group and was only asked about that group (narrow context). Both preschoolers and adults were sensitive to context: they were more likely to infer that the group not mentioned by the speaker was relatively unskilled, and were more confident about it, in the broad context condition. Our work integrates research in language development and social cognitive development and demonstrates that even young children can "read between the lines," utilizing subtle contextual cues to pick up negative evaluative messages about social groups even from statements that ostensibly do not mention them at all. HIGHLIGHTS: After hearing a speaker praise one group's skill, preschoolers and adults infer that an unmentioned group is relatively less skilled across a range of measures. These inferences are context-sensitive and are stronger when the speaker is knowledgeable of and asked about both groups' skill level. These results shed light on how children may indirectly learn negative stereotypes, especially ones that adults are unlikely to state explicitly. This work extends previous research on children's developing pragmatic ability, as well as their ability to learn about the social world from language.
幼儿常常认同一些刻板印象,比如“女孩不擅长数学”。我们探究了这些观念可能被传递的一种机制:通过语用推理。具体而言,我们询问学龄前儿童和成年人是否能从关于一个社会群体的描述中了解到未被提及的另一个群体,以及这种推理过程是否会受到话语语境的影响。63名3至5岁的儿童和55名成年人被介绍了两个虚构的社会群体——条纹族和圆点族——并目睹一位讲述者赞扬其中一个群体的能力(例如,“条纹族擅长制造椅子”)。为了考察语境的影响,我们比较了两种情况:一种是讲述者了解两个群体的能力,并且被问及两个群体的表现(宽泛语境);另一种是讲述者只了解一个群体,并且只被问及那个群体(狭窄语境)。学龄前儿童和成年人都对语境敏感:在宽泛语境条件下,他们更有可能推断讲述者未提及的群体相对缺乏技能,并且对此更有信心。我们的研究整合了语言发展和社会认知发展方面的研究,表明即使是幼儿也能“透过字里行间领会意思”,利用微妙的语境线索,甚至从表面上根本没有提及他们的陈述中获取关于社会群体的负面评价信息。要点:在听到讲述者赞扬一个群体的技能后,学龄前儿童和成年人推断出一个未被提及的群体在一系列衡量标准上相对缺乏技能。这些推断对语境敏感,当讲述者了解并被问及两个群体的技能水平时,推断更强。这些结果揭示了儿童可能如何间接学习负面刻板印象,尤其是那些成年人不太可能明确表述的刻板印象。这项研究扩展了先前关于儿童语用能力发展以及他们从语言中了解社会世界能力的研究。