Means-Inference as a Source of Variability in Early Helping

Humans, as compared to their primate relatives, readily act on behalf of others: we help, inform, share resources with, and provide emotional comfort for others. Although these prosocial behaviors emerge early in life, some types of prosocial behaviors seem to emerge earlier than others, and some ta...

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Main Authors: Sophie Bridgers, Hyowon Gweon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01735/full
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spelling doaj-771afa45ffbb47178ff291f40a629f702020-11-24T21:30:05ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782018-09-01910.3389/fpsyg.2018.01735410148Means-Inference as a Source of Variability in Early HelpingSophie BridgersHyowon GweonHumans, as compared to their primate relatives, readily act on behalf of others: we help, inform, share resources with, and provide emotional comfort for others. Although these prosocial behaviors emerge early in life, some types of prosocial behaviors seem to emerge earlier than others, and some tasks elicit more reliable helping than others. Here we discuss existing perspectives on the sources of variability in early prosocial behaviors with a particular focus on the variability within the domain of instrumental helping. We suggest that successful helping behavior not only requires an understanding of others' goals (goal-inference), but also the ability to figure out how to help (means-inference). We review recent work that highlights two key factors that support means-inference: causal reasoning and sensitivity to the expected costs and rewards of actions. Once we begin to look closely at the process of deciding how to help someone, even a seemingly simple helping behavior is, in fact, a consequence of a sophisticated decision-making process; it involves reasoning about others (e.g., goals, actions, and beliefs), about the causal structure of the physical world, and about one's own ability to provide effective help. A finer-grained understanding of the role of these inferences may help explain the developmental trajectory of prosocial behaviors in early childhood. We discuss the promise of computational models that formalize this decision process and how this approach can provide additional insights into why humans show unparalleled propensity and flexibility in their ability to help others.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01735/fullprosocial behaviorinstrumental helpingdecision-makingcausal reasoningcost-benefit-analysiscognitive development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sophie Bridgers
Hyowon Gweon
spellingShingle Sophie Bridgers
Hyowon Gweon
Means-Inference as a Source of Variability in Early Helping
Frontiers in Psychology
prosocial behavior
instrumental helping
decision-making
causal reasoning
cost-benefit-analysis
cognitive development
author_facet Sophie Bridgers
Hyowon Gweon
author_sort Sophie Bridgers
title Means-Inference as a Source of Variability in Early Helping
title_short Means-Inference as a Source of Variability in Early Helping
title_full Means-Inference as a Source of Variability in Early Helping
title_fullStr Means-Inference as a Source of Variability in Early Helping
title_full_unstemmed Means-Inference as a Source of Variability in Early Helping
title_sort means-inference as a source of variability in early helping
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Humans, as compared to their primate relatives, readily act on behalf of others: we help, inform, share resources with, and provide emotional comfort for others. Although these prosocial behaviors emerge early in life, some types of prosocial behaviors seem to emerge earlier than others, and some tasks elicit more reliable helping than others. Here we discuss existing perspectives on the sources of variability in early prosocial behaviors with a particular focus on the variability within the domain of instrumental helping. We suggest that successful helping behavior not only requires an understanding of others' goals (goal-inference), but also the ability to figure out how to help (means-inference). We review recent work that highlights two key factors that support means-inference: causal reasoning and sensitivity to the expected costs and rewards of actions. Once we begin to look closely at the process of deciding how to help someone, even a seemingly simple helping behavior is, in fact, a consequence of a sophisticated decision-making process; it involves reasoning about others (e.g., goals, actions, and beliefs), about the causal structure of the physical world, and about one's own ability to provide effective help. A finer-grained understanding of the role of these inferences may help explain the developmental trajectory of prosocial behaviors in early childhood. We discuss the promise of computational models that formalize this decision process and how this approach can provide additional insights into why humans show unparalleled propensity and flexibility in their ability to help others.
topic prosocial behavior
instrumental helping
decision-making
causal reasoning
cost-benefit-analysis
cognitive development
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01735/full
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