The development of optimistic expectations in young children

Optimism, a bias to overestimate positive and underestimate negative outcomes, may shape how children learn, confront challenges, and overcome setbacks. Although approximately 80% of adults are optimistic, childhood optimism is understudied. A racially and socioeconomically diverse community sample...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cognitive development 2022-07, Vol.63, p.101201, Article 101201
Hauptverfasser: Hennefield, Laura, Markson, Lori
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Optimism, a bias to overestimate positive and underestimate negative outcomes, may shape how children learn, confront challenges, and overcome setbacks. Although approximately 80% of adults are optimistic, childhood optimism is understudied. A racially and socioeconomically diverse community sample of 152 three- to six-year-old children participated in two experiments (one story-based, one numeric probability-based) that assessed expectations of event outcomes when the likelihood of the outcome occurring either matched or conflicted with the most desirable outcome. The results systematically demonstrate that children are optimistic, even more optimistic for themselves than others, and increasingly integrate probabilistic information into their predictions with age. Differences in optimism were found in children from different socioeconomic backgrounds and those with different levels of depressive symptoms. These findings provide insight into how children reason about the future and elucidate key factors that impact optimistic predictions in childhood. •3- to 6-year-old children overestimate positive event outcomes, indicating optimism.•Children are more optimistic for themselves than others.•Children increasingly integrate probabilistic information into their predictions with age.•Individual differences, including SES and depressive symptoms, may link to optimism.
ISSN:0885-2014
1879-226X
DOI:10.1016/j.cogdev.2022.101201