Young children show negative emotions after failing to help others.

Stella C Gerdemann, Jenny Tippmann, Bianca Dietrich, Jan M Engelmann, Robert Hepach
Author Information
  1. Stella C Gerdemann: Department of Early Child Development, Faculty of Education, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany. ORCID
  2. Jenny Tippmann: Institute for Medical Informatics and Biometry, Dresden University of Technology, Dresden, Germany.
  3. Bianca Dietrich: Department of Psychology, University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany.
  4. Jan M Engelmann: Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, United States of America.
  5. Robert Hepach: Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.

Abstract

Self-conscious emotions, such as guilt and shame, motivate the adherence to social norms, including to norms for prosociality. The relevance of an observing audience to the expression of negative self-conscious emotions remains poorly understood. Here, in two studies, we investigated the influence of being observed on 4- to 5-year-old children's (N = 161) emotional response after failing to help someone in need and after failing to complete their own goal. As an index of children's emotional response, we recorded the change in children's upper body posture using a motion depth sensor imaging camera. Failing to help others lowered children's upper body posture regardless of whether children were observed by an audience or not. Children's emotional response was similar when they failed to help and when they failed to complete their own goal. In Study 2, 5-year-olds showed a greater decrease in upper body posture than 4-year-olds. Our findings suggest that being observed is not a necessary condition for young children to express a negative self-conscious emotion after failing to help or after failing to complete their own goal. We conclude that 5-year-olds, more so that 4-year-olds, show negative emotions when they fail to adhere to social norms for prosociality.

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MeSH Term

Child, Preschool
Emotions
Guilt
Humans
Motivation
Shame

Word Cloud

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