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The Effects of Emotion Understanding on Preschoolers' Prosocial Decision-Making Based on the Emotional Conditions of a Counterpart Child

상대유아의 정서조건에 따른 유아의 정서이해가 친사회적 의사결정에 미치는 영향

  • Kim, Min Jeong (Department of Child Development and Family Studies, Seoul National University) ;
  • Lee, Kangyi (Department of Child Development and Family Studies, Seoul National University)
  • 김민정 (서울대학교 아동가족학과) ;
  • 이강이 (서울대학교 아동가족학과)
  • Received : 2016.12.21
  • Accepted : 2017.02.08
  • Published : 2017.02.28

Abstract

Objective: This study examined differences in preschoolers' prosocial decision-making, emotion understanding in prosocial dilemmas based on the age and emotional conditions of a counterpart child, and the effects of emotion understanding on preschoolers' prosocial decision-making. Methods: The participants were 114 children (35 3-year-olds, 39 4-year-olds, and 40 5-year-olds). Each child was presented individually with prosocial dilemma tasks and was asked to make decisions and understand emotions (in prosocial and desire-fulfilled situations) based on the emotional conditions of a counterpart child. Results: First, the 4- and 5-year-olds showed more prosocial decision-making in prosocial dilemmas than the 3-year-olds. Prosocial decision-making was significantly lower when the counterpart child was angry, rather than neutral or sadness. Second, in prosocial situations, the 5-year-olds displayed higher positive emotion understanding scores than the 3-year-olds, And in desire-fulfilled situations, the 3-year-olds showed positive emotion understanding, whereas the 4- and 5-year-olds showed negative emotion understanding. Finally, children were more inclined toward prosocial decision-making when they showed higher emotion understanding in prosocial situations, lower emotion understanding in desire-fulfilled situations, and greater age. These were equal to all emotional conditions of the counterpart child. Conclusion: These results suggest that emotion understanding is an important component of social cognition, which effects preschoolers' prosocial decision-making.

Keywords

References

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