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      Examining the Diversity of Prosocial Behavior: Helping, Sharing, and Comforting in Infancy : PROSOCIAL BEHAVIOR IN EARLY DEVELOPMENT

      , , ,
      Infancy
      Wiley

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          Empathy and Moral Development

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            Altruistic helping in human infants and young chimpanzees.

            Human beings routinely help others to achieve their goals, even when the helper receives no immediate benefit and the person helped is a stranger. Such altruistic behaviors (toward non-kin) are extremely rare evolutionarily, with some theorists even proposing that they are uniquely human. Here we show that human children as young as 18 months of age (prelinguistic or just-linguistic) quite readily help others to achieve their goals in a variety of different situations. This requires both an understanding of others' goals and an altruistic motivation to help. In addition, we demonstrate similar though less robust skills and motivations in three young chimpanzees.
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              Infants selectively encode the goal object of an actor's reach.

              Research with young children has shown that, like adults, they focus selectively on the aspects of an actor's behavior that are relevant to his or her underlying intentions. The current studies used the visual habituation paradigm to ask whether infants would similarly attend to those aspects of an action that are related to the actor's goals. Infants saw an actor reach for and grasp one of two toys sitting side by side on a curtained stage. After habituation, the positions of the toys were switched and babies saw test events in which there was a change in either the path of motion taken by the actor's arm or the object that was grasped by the actor. In the first study, 9-month-old infants looked longer when the actor grasped a new toy than when she moved through a new path. Nine-month-olds who saw an inanimate object of approximately the same dimensions as the actor's arm touch the toy did not show this pattern in test. In the second study, 5-month-old infants showed similar, though weaker, patterns. A third study provided evidence that the findings for the events involving a person were not due to perceptual changes in the objects caused by occlusion by the hand. A fourth study replicated the 9 month results for a human grasp at 6 months, and revealed that these effects did not emerge when infants saw an inanimate object with digits that moved to grasp the toy. Taken together, these findings indicate that young infants distinguish in their reasoning about human action and object motion, and that by 6 months infants encode the actions of other people in ways that are consistent with more mature understandings of goal-directed action.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Infancy
                Wiley
                15250008
                May 2011
                May 2011
                April 01 2011
                : 16
                : 3
                : 227-247
                Article
                10.1111/j.1532-7078.2010.00041.x
                32693496
                7a9bd277-7a62-4ebf-8753-6feda5d514a0
                © 2011

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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