Preschoolers' understanding of merit in two Asian societies

Recent research in moral psychology have suggested that children make judgments about distributive justice early on in development, and in particular they appear to be able to use merit when distributing the benefits of a collective action. This prediction has recently been validated in various west...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2015-05, Vol.10 (5), p.e0114717-e0114717
Hauptverfasser: Chevallier, Coralie, Xu, Jing, Adachi, Kuniko, van der Henst, Jean-Baptiste, Baumard, Nicolas
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Xu, Jing
Adachi, Kuniko
van der Henst, Jean-Baptiste
Baumard, Nicolas
description Recent research in moral psychology have suggested that children make judgments about distributive justice early on in development, and in particular they appear to be able to use merit when distributing the benefits of a collective action. This prediction has recently been validated in various western cultures but it is unknown whether it also applies to more collectivistic cultures, in which the group might be favoured over the individual, and need over merit. Here, we investigate merit-based distributions among 81 children belonging to two Asian societies, China and Japan (mean age = 5.0 years). In line with the idea that children's moral psychology develops early, we found that Chinese and Japanese children are able to use merit to distribute the benefits of a collective action.
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subjects Analysis
Asian Continental Ancestry Group - psychology
Child
Child Development - physiology
Child, Preschool
Children
Children & youth
China
Cognition & reasoning
Cognitive science
Collaboration
Collectivism
Collectivism (Economics)
Comprehension - ethics
Cultural differences
Distribution (Commerce)
Economic justice
Egalitarianism
Fairness
Female
Humans
Individualism
Japan
Judgment
Judgments
Male
Morality
Morals
Preferences
Preschool children
Psychological aspects
Psychology
Psychology, Child
Studies
title Preschoolers' understanding of merit in two Asian societies
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