prosocial behaviour and altruism Flashcards

1
Q

define prosocial behaviour

A

voluntary behaviour intended to benefit another
e.g. comforting, sharing, helping
children engage in more prosocial behaviours with age
can be for selfish purposes

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2
Q

define altruism

A

prosocial behaviour performed for unselfish motives
acts motivated by the welfare of others
relatively common in infancy

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3
Q

prosocial behaviour: comforting definition

A

addressing a negative emotional state

there are individual differences from differing affective responses to other’s distress

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4
Q

prosocial behaviour: comforting with age

A

younger children struggling to process or act on emotions - therefore seem to show no concern or comforting

rate of comforting others in pain or distress increases between age 1 and 2
age 3 = reasoned responsiveness to distress

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5
Q

prosocial behaviour: comforting - genetics

A

94 MZ and 90 DZ twins studied during second year of life with reactions to adults pretending to be distressed

used heritability estimates and found genetic factors have a modest role in toddlers prosocial action and concern
* perhaps from genes influence on neurohormonal system which influences response to others distress

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6
Q

prosocial behaviour: comforting - sympathy - 2 factors as to who would feel/act sympathetically

A

those who aren’t overwhelmed by emotions are more likely to feel sympathy

when not overly inhibited (e.g. not too shy) = more likely to act on sympathetic feelings

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7
Q

prosocial behaviour: comforting in chimpanzees

A

chimpanzees and bonobos comfort/reassure others
this occurs later in development than humans

understand human prosociality through when abilities emerge, not if they do

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8
Q

prosocial behaviour: helping definition

A

addressing instrumental need
assisting others

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9
Q

prosocial behaviour: helping - infants without language

A

12 month olds help by pointing informatively e.g. show adult where object is
helps others achieve instrumental goal - even without physical assistance

18 month olds spontaneously help an adult pretending to be struggling without instruction

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10
Q

prosocial behaviour: helping - chimpanzees

A

help in similar situations where the goal of the other person is easy to infer
debates over prosociality in chimpanzees - majority view is they do show prosocial helping behaviours

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11
Q

prosocial behaviour: helping - caregivers promoting helping study

A

caregivers get 18 and 30 month olds to help clean up
observed maternal behaviours and then child had opportunity to help another adult

promoted help =
* 18 months -> commands or requests, scaffolding (support relevant to activity)
* 30 months -> scaffolding, negotiation (e.g. clean up now so we can play something else)

did not promote help =
* reasoning - explaining need - reasoning develops around 36 months at least
* praise and positive comments - too generic, promotes self-esteem
* character attribution (e.g. you’re so good at this) - promotes self-esteem not helping

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12
Q

prosocial behaviour: sharing - definition

A

address material need/desire even at a personal cost

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13
Q

prosocial behaviour: sharing - affiliative sharing

A

shared attention and interest from around 6 months
start actively giving objects around 9-10 months
introduction of ideas of “mine” and “yours”

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14
Q

prosocial behaviour: sharing - resource sharing at 18 and 24 months

A

18 months
* start sharing resources e.g. food, toys
* initially requires lots of scaffolding from adults
* behaviour is uncommon, rarely spontaneous, and not very generous at this stage

24 months
* sharing is quicker, more often, more generous, and requires less promoting
* driven by increased social understanding - start saying “mine” between 18 and 24 months

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15
Q

prosocial behaviour: sharing - fairness and reciprocity behaviours

A

3 years = more discerning about who should benefit from their kind acts
think people should prefer to share resources with: family and friends, people who have shared with them (reciprocity) and people who have shared with others (indirect reciprocity)

children show strong reciprocity
sacrifice resources to punish and reward others

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16
Q

prosocial behaviour: sharing - fairness and reciprocity study (puppet)

A

game based around coins children could trade for small prizes
game played by the child and one generous and one stingy puppet
each player got to split 9 coins between the 3 of them
generous = 4 to child, 4 to other puppet, kept 1
stingy = kept 7, 1 to others

3 year old = self-maximising (take most coins for self)
5 year old = more even sharing (still more to self)

punishment: had opportunity to sacrifice one coin (cost to self) so puppet loses 5 coins
5 year olds consistently punish the stingy puppet

17
Q

prosocial behaviour: sharing - fairness and reciprocity study cultural variations (puppet)

A

stingy puppet study done on Samoan children (more collectivist than USA original)
* children were less self-maximising
* less likely to punish the puppet
* didn’t show reciprocity tendency to target stingy puppet at 5 years old

suggests attitudes to reciprocity/fairness are modulated by cultural context

18
Q

prosocial behaviour: sharing - inequity study

A

studies 4-15 year olds in 7 societies
two kids sit opposite each other with 2 bowls with sweets on and levers
green lever = both get sweets on own side
red lever = neither gets any sweets

advantageous inequity = child in control is given more sweets
disadvantageous inequity = child in control is given less sweets

results
disadvantageous inequity aversion emerged in all populations by middle childhood - reject when they have less sweets

advantageous inequity aversion emerged in 3 populations later on in development - rejecting when they have more sweets

19
Q

prosocial behaviour: sharing in apes

A

female chimps share food - more common in bonobos
bonobos voluntarily hand food to others - not toys or tools

20
Q

prosocial behaviour: sharing - which behaviours are culturally variable

A

not variable:
* self-maximising 3 year olds
* fairness and disadvantageous inequity aversion by 5 years old

variable:
* self-maximisation
* advantageous inequity aversion
* strong reciprocity

21
Q

infants altruistic behaviours

A

toddlers help others even anonymously - whether adult is there to watch or not
2 year olds remedy unnoticed accidents e.g. pick up dropped object
proactive rather than prosocial
occurs even when engaged in interesting task of their own

22
Q

motivational sources of prosociality (3)

A
  • empathic concern - concern for others wellbeing
  • gratitude and guilt - gratitude = sustains prosocial interactions and reinforces reciprocity, guilt = motivates repair of ruptured social relations
  • obligation = commitments create sense of social obligation, norms create an expectation of altruistic behaviour
23
Q

reward as a motivational source of prosociality study

A

20 month year old children had chance to help an adult
adult responds with: material reward, praise (verbal reward), neutral response (no reward)
then given opportunity to help again

results
less likely to help again in reward condition - extrinsic motivator
praise was not a verbal reward - focus on intrinsic motivation - helped more
intrinsic motivation importance to altruistic action - undermined by extrinsic motivation

24
Q

is altruism innate

A

yes = infants display helping from young age - extrinsic motivation inhibits helping behaviour

no = early helping can be explained by motivation for social interaction rather than altruism

25
Q

multifaceted nature of prosociality

A

not driven by singular capacity
range of forms - nuanced approach
different components underpinned by different constructs
versatile hypothesis