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The roles of perspective and language in children's ability to delay gratification

journal contribution
posted on 2020-06-08, 04:15 authored by CEV Mahy, Louis Moses, B O'Brien, AW Castro, L Kopp, CM Atance
© 2019 Elsevier Inc. Increasing psychological distance is an established method for improving children's performance in a number of self-regulation tasks. For example, using a delay of gratification (DoG) task, Prencipe and Zelazo (Psychological Science, 2005, Vol. 16, pp. 501–505) showed that 3-year-olds delay more for “other” than they do for “self,” whereas 4-year-olds make similar choices for self and other. However, to our knowledge, no work has manipulated language to increase psychological distance in children. In two experiments, we sought to manipulate psychological distance by replicating Prencipe and Zelazo's age-related findings and extending them to older children (Experiment 1) and also sought to manipulate psychological distance using the auxiliary verbs “want” and “should” to prime more impulsive preference-based decisions or more normative optimal decisions (Experiment 2). In Experiment 1, 96 3- to 7-year-olds showed age-related improvements and interactive effects between age and perspective on DoG performance. In Experiment 2, 132 3- to 7-year-olds showed age-related improvements and a marginal interaction between age and perspective on DoG performance, but no effect of auxiliary verbs was detected. Results are discussed in terms of differing developmental trajectories of DoG for self and other due to psychological distancing, and how taking another's perspective may boost DoG in younger children but not older children.

History

Preferred citation

Mahy, C.E. V., Moses, L.J., O'Brien, B., Castro, A.W., Kopp, L. & Atance, C.M. (2020). The roles of perspective and language in children's ability to delay gratification. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 192, 104767-104767. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2019.104767

Journal title

Journal of Experimental Child Psychology

Volume

192

Publication date

2020-04-01

Pagination

104767-104767

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Publication status

Published

ISSN

0022-0965

eISSN

1096-0457

Article number

104767

Language

en

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