Peer interaction influence on decision-making in ten-year-old children

The aim of this study was to investigate the changes in decision-making of ten-year old children under the influence of peer interaction. We tried to determine whether there were differences in the decision-making process when children made their decisions in a group, as opposed to the situation whe...

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Main Authors: Jošić Smiljana, Buđevac Nevena, Baucal Aleksandar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Belgrade, Faculty of Philosophy, Institute of Psychology 2012-01-01
Series:Psihološka Istraživanja
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0352-7379/2012/0352-73791202185J.pdf
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spelling doaj-65db1286244e4efdadd9ddab988d37882020-11-25T00:09:41ZengUniversity of Belgrade, Faculty of Philosophy, Institute of PsychologyPsihološka Istraživanja0352-73792560-306X2012-01-0115218520710.5937/PsIstra1202185J0352-73791202185JPeer interaction influence on decision-making in ten-year-old childrenJošić Smiljana0Buđevac Nevena1Baucal Aleksandar2Education Research Institute, Belgrade, SerbiaUčiteljski fakultet, Beograd + Filozofski fakultet, BeogradUniversity of Belgrade, Faculty of Philosophy - Department of Psychology, Belgrade, SerbiaThe aim of this study was to investigate the changes in decision-making of ten-year old children under the influence of peer interaction. We tried to determine whether there were differences in the decision-making process when children made their decisions in a group, as opposed to the situation when they decided individually. In the first phase of the study (which included individual decision-making), 139 fourth-graders were tested. Based on their responses we formed 10 triads in the experimental group. The control group consisted of 31 children with the response structure equivalent to the initial response structure in the experimental group. In the second phase, children in the control group once again decided individually, while children in the experimental group made a group decision. We found that subjects in the control group retained their previous decisions, while children in the experimental group changed their initial decisions under the influence of peers, so that their decisions became less risky. This finding may be ascribed to the context in which the research was conducted (school), but also to the content of the task used. Qualitative analysis of social interaction enabled us to understand the dynamics of group decision-making. We found several mechanisms that explain how children change their initial decision in the triad (reference to the opinion of the authority, conversational passivity, majority rule, etc.), and how they retain their decision (conversational activity and argumentation).http://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0352-7379/2012/0352-73791202185J.pdften-year-old childrensocial interactiondecision-makingconversational analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jošić Smiljana
Buđevac Nevena
Baucal Aleksandar
spellingShingle Jošić Smiljana
Buđevac Nevena
Baucal Aleksandar
Peer interaction influence on decision-making in ten-year-old children
Psihološka Istraživanja
ten-year-old children
social interaction
decision-making
conversational analysis
author_facet Jošić Smiljana
Buđevac Nevena
Baucal Aleksandar
author_sort Jošić Smiljana
title Peer interaction influence on decision-making in ten-year-old children
title_short Peer interaction influence on decision-making in ten-year-old children
title_full Peer interaction influence on decision-making in ten-year-old children
title_fullStr Peer interaction influence on decision-making in ten-year-old children
title_full_unstemmed Peer interaction influence on decision-making in ten-year-old children
title_sort peer interaction influence on decision-making in ten-year-old children
publisher University of Belgrade, Faculty of Philosophy, Institute of Psychology
series Psihološka Istraživanja
issn 0352-7379
2560-306X
publishDate 2012-01-01
description The aim of this study was to investigate the changes in decision-making of ten-year old children under the influence of peer interaction. We tried to determine whether there were differences in the decision-making process when children made their decisions in a group, as opposed to the situation when they decided individually. In the first phase of the study (which included individual decision-making), 139 fourth-graders were tested. Based on their responses we formed 10 triads in the experimental group. The control group consisted of 31 children with the response structure equivalent to the initial response structure in the experimental group. In the second phase, children in the control group once again decided individually, while children in the experimental group made a group decision. We found that subjects in the control group retained their previous decisions, while children in the experimental group changed their initial decisions under the influence of peers, so that their decisions became less risky. This finding may be ascribed to the context in which the research was conducted (school), but also to the content of the task used. Qualitative analysis of social interaction enabled us to understand the dynamics of group decision-making. We found several mechanisms that explain how children change their initial decision in the triad (reference to the opinion of the authority, conversational passivity, majority rule, etc.), and how they retain their decision (conversational activity and argumentation).
topic ten-year-old children
social interaction
decision-making
conversational analysis
url http://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0352-7379/2012/0352-73791202185J.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT josicsmiljana peerinteractioninfluenceondecisionmakingintenyearoldchildren
AT buđevacnevena peerinteractioninfluenceondecisionmakingintenyearoldchildren
AT baucalaleksandar peerinteractioninfluenceondecisionmakingintenyearoldchildren
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