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Children's distinct drive to reproduce costly rituals

journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-13, 08:59 authored by M Zhao, Tze Kiet FongTze Kiet Fong, A Whiten, M Nielsen
Costly rituals are ubiquitous and adaptive. Yet, little is known about how children develop to acquire them. The current study examined children's imitation of costly rituals. Ninety-three 4–6 year olds (47 girls, 45% Oceanians, tested in 2022) were shown how to place tokens into a tube to earn stickers, using either a ritualistic or non-ritualistic costly action sequence. Children shown the ritualistic actions imitated faithfully at the expense of gaining stickers; conversely, those shown the non-ritualistic actions ignored them and obtained maximum reward. This highlights how preschool children are adept at and motivated to learn rituals, despite significant material cost. This study provides insights into the early development of cultural learning and the adaptive value of rituals in group cognition.

History

Preferred citation

Zhao, M., Fong, F. T. K., Whiten, A. & Nielsen, M. (2024). Children's distinct drive to reproduce costly rituals. Child Development, 95(4), 1161-1171. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.14061

Journal title

Child Development

Volume

95

Issue

4

Publication date

2024-07-01

Pagination

1161-1171

Publisher

Wiley

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2023-12-18

ISSN

0009-3920

eISSN

1467-8624

Language

en