The role of attentional processes in children's prosocial behavior with peers: Attention shifting and emotion

被引:39
|
作者
Wilson, BJ [1 ]
机构
[1] Seattle Pacific Univ, Dept Grad Psychol, Seattle, WA 98119 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1017/S0954579403000178
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
This study evaluated the role of attentional shifting in children's prosocial behavior with peers. Participants were 27 aggressive/rejected and 27 nonaggressive/popular kindergarten and first grade boys and girls. Children's ability to shift attention from one affective state to another was assessed during: (a) a computerized task that required shifting attention between different affective events (i.e., the Children's Attentional Shifting Task, CAST) and (b) an analogue entry task with unacquainted peers, Children's latency for sharing with peers was assessed after they experienced failure during the entry task. Aggressive/rejected children had significant difficulty shifting attention from negative to positive affect during the CAST and were slower to share after experiencing entry failure. In general, aggressive/rejected children were less able to regulate their behavior effectively after experiencing social failure. Girls, regardless of status, had less difficulty than boys shifting attention from one affective state to another during the CAST. In addition, children's social status/aggressiveness, their ability to regulate emotional behavior after social failure and to shift attention effectively on the CAST predicted approximately 31% of the variance in their latency to share. These findings suggest that the ability to shift attention between different affective states plays a significant role in children's prosocial behavior with peers.
引用
收藏
页码:313 / 329
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The effects of young children's affiliations with prosocial peers on subsequent emotionality in peer interactions
    Fabes, Richard A.
    Hanish, Laura D.
    Martin, Carol Lynn
    Moss, Alicia
    Reesing, Amy
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2012, 30 (04) : 569 - 585
  • [32] Children's evaluations of ambiguous provocation by relationally aggressive, physically aggressive and prosocial peers
    Goldstein, Sara E.
    Tisak, Marie S.
    Persson, Anna V.
    Boxer, Paul
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2006, 24 : 701 - 708
  • [33] Young children's prosocial responses toward peers and adults in two social contexts
    Ulber, Julia
    Tomasello, Michael
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 198
  • [34] Children's Moral Motivation, Sympathy, and Prosocial Behavior
    Malti, Tina
    Gummerum, Michaela
    Keller, Monika
    Buchmann, Marlis
    CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 2009, 80 (02) : 442 - 460
  • [35] The television situation comedy and children's prosocial behavior
    Rosenkoetter, LI
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1999, 29 (05) : 979 - 993
  • [36] Children's attentional skills and road behavior
    Dunbar, G
    Hill, R
    Lewis, V
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-APPLIED, 2001, 7 (03) : 227 - 234
  • [37] Parenting and children's prosocial and problem behaviors in middle childhood: The role of Turkish mothers' emotion socialization practices
    Acar-Bayraktar, Ayse Vildan
    Cakmak, Zeynep
    Saritas-Atalar, Dilek
    SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, 2019, 28 (02) : 333 - 346
  • [38] On the Role of Attention and Emotion in Morality: Attentional Control Modulates Unrelated Disgust in Moral Judgments
    Van Dillen, Lotte F.
    van der Wal, Reine C.
    van den Bos, Kees
    PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BULLETIN, 2012, 38 (09) : 1222 - 1231
  • [39] Attentional Processes in Children's Overt and Relational Aggression
    Arsenault, Darin J.
    Foster, Sharon L.
    MERRILL-PALMER QUARTERLY-JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2012, 58 (03): : 409 - 436
  • [40] Early adolescence and prosocial/moral behavior I: The role of individual processes
    Fabes, RA
    Carlo, G
    Kupanoff, K
    Laible, D
    JOURNAL OF EARLY ADOLESCENCE, 1999, 19 (01): : 5 - 16