Culture and early social-cognitive development.

Prog Brain Res

Department of Psychology, University of Münster, Münster, Germany.

Published: June 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • This chapter explores how culture influences children's early social-cognitive development through a developmental systems lens.
  • The review of cross-cultural literature reveals that while there are universal social-cognitive skills that develop in early childhood, specific cultural values shape how these skills manifest and are prioritized.
  • Caregivers play a crucial role in guiding infants' social cognition by organizing their experiences in ways that reflect cultural ideals, leading to unique cultural variations in development from a young age.

Article Abstract

From a developmental systems perspective, this chapter focuses on the question whether culture matters for children's early social-cognitive development. Based on a review of the current cross-cultural literature, we evaluate the current state of research on cross-cultural similarities and differences in major developmental milestones of early social cognition, namely (i) the development of self-awareness and an understanding of self and others as intentional agents, (ii) advanced forms of social learning and (iii) prosocial cognition and behavior. Overall, the current cross-cultural research suggests universality without uniformity: the common suite of social-cognitive skills emerges reliably and, at the same time, there are culture-specific accentuations of social-cognitive development across domains that mostly are in line with cultural values, beliefs and practices. By following different agendas when providing and structuring physical and social settings for their children, caregivers coherently organize infants' nascent intuitions, sentiments, and inclinations into increasingly coherent patterns of attention, appraisal, experience and behavior that are in line with cultural ideals and beliefs. By doing so, culturally informed social interaction sets the stage for culture-specific modulations of social cognition already in the first years of life.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/bs.pbr.2020.06.011DOI Listing

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