What makes children defy majorities? The role of dissenters in Chinese and Spanish preschoolers’ social judgments.
When many people say the same thing, the individual is more likely to endorse this information than when just a single person says the same. Yet, the influence of consensus information may be modulated by many personal, contextual and cultural variables. Here, we study the sensitivity of Chinese (...
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doaj-970553ab102c4b669f316720e7cce4b42020-11-24T22:23:06ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-10-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.01695208681What makes children defy majorities? The role of dissenters in Chinese and Spanish preschoolers’ social judgments.Ileana Enesco0Carla Sebastián-Enesco1Silvia Guerrero2Siyu Quan3Sonia Garijo4Universidad Complutense de MadridWilliam James Center for Research -ISPA, Instituto UniversitárioUniversidad Castilla-La ManchaTulane UniversityUniversidad Complutense de MadridWhen many people say the same thing, the individual is more likely to endorse this information than when just a single person says the same. Yet, the influence of consensus information may be modulated by many personal, contextual and cultural variables. Here, we study the sensitivity of Chinese (N = 68) and Spanish (N = 82) preschoolers to consensus in social decision making contexts. Children faced two different types of peer-interaction events, which involved (1) uncertain or ambiguous scenarios open to interpretation (social interpretation context), and (2) explicit scenarios depicting the exclusion of a peer (moral judgment context). Children first observed a video in which a group of teachers offered their opinion about the events, and then they were asked to evaluate the information provided. Participants were assigned to two conditions that differed in the type of consensus: Unanimous majority (non-dissenter condition) and non-unanimous majority (dissenter condition). In the dissenter condition, we presented the conflicting opinions of three teachers vs. one teacher. In the non-dissenter condition, we presented the unanimous opinion of three teachers. The general results indicated that children’s sensitivity to consensus varies depending both on the degree of ambiguity of the social events and the presence or not of a dissenter: 1) Children were much more likely to endorse the majority view when they were uncertain (social interpretation context), than when they already had a clear interpretation of the situation (moral judgment context); 2) The presence of a dissenter resulted in a significant decrease in children’s confidence in majority. Interestingly, in the moral judgment context, Chinese and Spanish children differed in their willingness to defy a majority whose opinion run against their own. While Spanish children maintained their own criteria regardless of the type of condition, Chinese children did so when an allied dissenter was present (dissenter condition) but not when confronting a unanimous majority (non-dissenter condition). Tentatively, we suggest that this difference might be related to culture-specific patterns regarding children’s deference towards adults.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01695/fulltestimonycross-cultural psychologymoral judgmentconsensussocial developmentMajority |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ileana Enesco Carla Sebastián-Enesco Silvia Guerrero Siyu Quan Sonia Garijo |
spellingShingle |
Ileana Enesco Carla Sebastián-Enesco Silvia Guerrero Siyu Quan Sonia Garijo What makes children defy majorities? The role of dissenters in Chinese and Spanish preschoolers’ social judgments. Frontiers in Psychology testimony cross-cultural psychology moral judgment consensus social development Majority |
author_facet |
Ileana Enesco Carla Sebastián-Enesco Silvia Guerrero Siyu Quan Sonia Garijo |
author_sort |
Ileana Enesco |
title |
What makes children defy majorities? The role of dissenters in Chinese and Spanish preschoolers’ social judgments. |
title_short |
What makes children defy majorities? The role of dissenters in Chinese and Spanish preschoolers’ social judgments. |
title_full |
What makes children defy majorities? The role of dissenters in Chinese and Spanish preschoolers’ social judgments. |
title_fullStr |
What makes children defy majorities? The role of dissenters in Chinese and Spanish preschoolers’ social judgments. |
title_full_unstemmed |
What makes children defy majorities? The role of dissenters in Chinese and Spanish preschoolers’ social judgments. |
title_sort |
what makes children defy majorities? the role of dissenters in chinese and spanish preschoolers’ social judgments. |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Psychology |
issn |
1664-1078 |
publishDate |
2016-10-01 |
description |
When many people say the same thing, the individual is more likely to endorse this information than when just a single person says the same. Yet, the influence of consensus information may be modulated by many personal, contextual and cultural variables. Here, we study the sensitivity of Chinese (N = 68) and Spanish (N = 82) preschoolers to consensus in social decision making contexts. Children faced two different types of peer-interaction events, which involved (1) uncertain or ambiguous scenarios open to interpretation (social interpretation context), and (2) explicit scenarios depicting the exclusion of a peer (moral judgment context). Children first observed a video in which a group of teachers offered their opinion about the events, and then they were asked to evaluate the information provided. Participants were assigned to two conditions that differed in the type of consensus: Unanimous majority (non-dissenter condition) and non-unanimous majority (dissenter condition). In the dissenter condition, we presented the conflicting opinions of three teachers vs. one teacher. In the non-dissenter condition, we presented the unanimous opinion of three teachers. The general results indicated that children’s sensitivity to consensus varies depending both on the degree of ambiguity of the social events and the presence or not of a dissenter: 1) Children were much more likely to endorse the majority view when they were uncertain (social interpretation context), than when they already had a clear interpretation of the situation (moral judgment context); 2) The presence of a dissenter resulted in a significant decrease in children’s confidence in majority. Interestingly, in the moral judgment context, Chinese and Spanish children differed in their willingness to defy a majority whose opinion run against their own. While Spanish children maintained their own criteria regardless of the type of condition, Chinese children did so when an allied dissenter was present (dissenter condition) but not when confronting a unanimous majority (non-dissenter condition). Tentatively, we suggest that this difference might be related to culture-specific patterns regarding children’s deference towards adults. |
topic |
testimony cross-cultural psychology moral judgment consensus social development Majority |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01695/full |
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