Eighteen‐Month‐Old Infants Correct Non‐Conforming Actions by Others

At around their third birthday, children begin to enforce social norms on others impersonally, often using generic normative language, but little is known about the developmental building blocks of this norm understanding. Here, we investigate whether even toddlers show signs of enforcing on others...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Infancy Vol. 24; no. 4; pp. 613 - 635
Main Authors: Schmidt, Marco F. H., Rakoczy, Hannes, Tomasello, Michael
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01-07-2019
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Summary:At around their third birthday, children begin to enforce social norms on others impersonally, often using generic normative language, but little is known about the developmental building blocks of this norm understanding. Here, we investigate whether even toddlers show signs of enforcing on others interpersonally how “we” do things. In an initial dyad, 18‐month‐old infants learnt a simple game‐like action from an adult. In two experiments, the adult either engaged infants in a normative interactive activity (stressing that this is the way “we” do it) or, as a non‐normative control, marked the same action as idiosyncratic, based on individual preference. In a test dyad, infants had the opportunity to spontaneously intervene when a puppet partner performed an alternative action. Infants intervened, corrected, and directed the puppet more in the normative than in the non‐normative conditions. These findings suggest that, during the second year of life, infants develop second‐personal normative expectations about their partner's behavior (“You should do X!”) in social interactions, thus making an important step toward understanding the normative structure of human cultural activities. These simple normative expectations will later be scaled up to group‐minded and social norms.
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ISSN:1525-0008
1532-7078
DOI:10.1111/infa.12292