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At 4.5 but not 5.5 years, children favor kin when the stakes are moderately high

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  • Annie C Spokes
  • Elizabeth S Spelke

Abstract

Adults report more willingness to help siblings over close friends when the stakes are extremely high, such as when deciding whether to donate a kidney or risk injury to rescue someone in peril. When dividing plentiful, low-value resources, in contrast, children expect people to share equally with friends and siblings. Even when distributing limited resources—one instead of many—and distributing to their own social partners rather than fictional characters, children share more with kin and friends than with strangers but do not favor kin over friends until 5.5 years of age. However, no study has tested whether children would preferentially benefit kin if the rewards require that children incur a higher personal cost of their own time and effort. In the present experiment, therefore, we asked if children would work harder for kin over non-kin when playing a challenging geometry game that allowed them to earn rewards for others. We found that 4.5-year-old children calibrated their time and effort in the game differently according to who received the rewards—they played for more trials and answered more trials correctly for kin over non-kin, but 5.5-year-old children did not. The older children may have found the task easier and less costly or may have different social experiences affecting their efforts to benefit others. Nonetheless, 4.5-year-old children’s social decisions favored kin as recipients of their generosity.

Suggested Citation

  • Annie C Spokes & Elizabeth S Spelke, 2018. "At 4.5 but not 5.5 years, children favor kin when the stakes are moderately high," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 13(8), pages 1-11, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0202507
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0202507
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Debra Lieberman & John Tooby & Leda Cosmides, 2007. "The architecture of human kin detection," Nature, Nature, vol. 445(7129), pages 727-731, February.
    2. Katherine McAuliffe & Peter R. Blake & Nikolaus Steinbeis & Felix Warneken, 2017. "The developmental foundations of human fairness," Nature Human Behaviour, Nature, vol. 1(2), pages 1-9, February.
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