Infants distinguish between leaders and bullies.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Department of Psychology and Cognitive Sciences, University of Trento, 38068 Rovereto (TN), Italy;

Published: September 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers studied whether 21-month-old infants could tell the difference between respect-based power from a leader and fear-based power from a bully.
  • Infants watched scenarios where characters interacted with a leader or a bully, then observed how the protagonists obeyed or disobeyed orders after the character left.
  • The infants showed distinct reactions: they expected obedience to the leader but viewed disobedience and obedience as equally likely in the bully scenario, suggesting they understand the nature of different types of power by this age.

Article Abstract

We examined whether 21-month-old infants could distinguish between two broad types of social power: respect-based power exerted by a leader (who might be an authority figure with legitimate power, a prestigious individual with merited power, or some combination thereof) and fear-based power exerted by a bully. Infants first saw three protagonists interact with a character who was either a leader (leader condition) or a bully (bully condition). Next, the character gave an order to the protagonists, who initially obeyed; the character then left the scene, and the protagonists either continued to obey (obey event) or no longer did so (disobey event). Infants in the leader condition looked significantly longer at the disobey than at the obey event, suggesting that they expected the protagonists to continue to obey the leader in her absence. In contrast, infants in the bully condition looked equally at the two events, suggesting that they viewed both outcomes as plausible: The protagonists might continue to obey the absent bully to prevent further harm, or they might disobey her because her power over them weakened in her absence. Additional results supported these interpretations: Infants expected obedience when the bully remained in the scene and could harm the protagonists if defied, but they expected disobedience when the order was given by a character with little or no power over the protagonists. Together, these results indicate that by 21 months of age, infants already hold different expectations for subordinates' responses to individuals with respect-based as opposed to fear-based power.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6156645PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1801677115DOI Listing

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