AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research indicates that children start showing group bias at an early age, but the influence of their environment and cultural context on this bias is not well understood.
  • A study involving 46 children aged four to six from the Faroe Islands used a minimal groups paradigm to observe how children responded to in-group versus out-group members based on prosocial behavior.
  • The findings revealed that while Faroese children initially showed no bias, a clear preference for in-group members emerged later, highlighting that the development of intergroup bias can vary significantly between cultures, as seen when compared to American children.

Article Abstract

Recent developmental research demonstrates that group bias emerges early in childhood. However, little is known about the extent to which bias in minimal (i.e., arbitrarily assigned) groups varies with children's environment and experience, and whether such bias is universal across cultures. In this study, the development of group bias was investigated using a minimal groups paradigm with 46 four- to six-year-olds from the Faroe Islands. Children observed in-group and out-group members exhibiting varying degrees of prosocial behaviour (egalitarian or stingy sharing). Children did not prefer their in-group in the pretest, but a pro-in-group and anti-out-group sentiment emerged in both conditions in the posttest. Faroese children's response patterns differ from those of American children [Schug, M. G., Shusterman, A., Barth, H., & Patalano, A. L. (2013). Minimal-group membership influences children's responses to novel experience with group members. Developmental Science, 16(1), 47-55], suggesting that intergroup bias shows cultural variation even in a minimal groups context.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17470218.2015.1093511DOI Listing

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