1. Helping the One You Hurt: Toddlers' Rudimentary Guilt, Shame, and Prosocial Behavior After Harming Another.
- Author
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Drummond, Jesse D. K., Hammond, Stuart I., Satlof‐Bedrick, Emma, Waugh, Whitney E., Brownell, Celia A., and Satlof-Bedrick, Emma
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of toddlers ,GUILT in children ,SHAME in children ,PROSOCIAL behavior ,HELPING behavior in children ,CHILD behavior ,GUILT (Psychology) ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,SHAME ,SOCIAL skills - Abstract
This study explored the role of guilt and shame in early prosocial behavior by extending previous findings that guilt- and shame-like responses can be distinguished in toddlers and, for the first time, examining their associations with helping. Toddlers (n = 32; Mage = 28.9 months) were led to believe they broke an adult's toy, after which they exhibited either a guilt-like response that included frequently confessing their behavior and trying to repair the toy; or a shame-like response that included frequently avoiding the adult and seldom confessing or attempting to repair the toy. In subsequent prosocial tasks, children showing a guilt-like response helped an adult in emotional distress significantly faster and more frequently than did children showing a shame-like response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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