Elsevier

Acta Psychologica

Volume 230, October 2022, 103714
Acta Psychologica

Give and take: A microgenetic study of preschoolers' deceptive and prosocial behavior in relation to their socio-cognitive development

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2022.103714Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Preschoolers’ deceptive and sharing behavior was investigated over 10+1 follow-up sessions of a competitive deception game.

  • There was a group who never deceived and a group who constantly deceived; sharing was extremely low for both groups.

  • Deceivers shared less than non-deceivers during the 10 microgenetic sessions, this pattern being reversed at follow-up.

  • Children who deceived had higher ToM scores compared to those who did not.

  • ToM positively predicted deception across all sessions and improved after the microgenetic sessions.

Abstract

Early on, young children begin to learn the social skills which will help them navigate through an increasingly complex social world. We explored how deceiving for personal gain potentially interacts with sharing the resulting resources and how they both relate to theory of mind (ToM) and inhibitory control in 3- to 5-year-old children (N = 92, 43 girls). Children played a hide-and-seek zero-sum game in which they could win stickers if they discovered how to deceive the experimenter. Then they were prompted to share their stickers in a dictator game paradigm. Using a microgenetic design, we tracked deceptive behavior across ten sessions and sharing behavior across five of these sessions, plus a follow-up session 15 months later. Children polarized into a group who never deceived across all sessions, and a group who constantly deceived above chance levels (around 85 % of the time). Sharing behavior was extremely low (under 6 % of stickers) across the sessions. At follow-up, deceptive behavior was above 80 %, while sharing remained at a low level (under 5 %). The novelty of our findings was that children who initially discovered how to deceive shared less than the children who didn't use this deceptive strategy. Nonetheless, this pattern was reversed at follow-up. Furthermore, ToM positively predicted deceptive behavior across all sessions and improved after the microgenetic sessions but wasn't related with deception at follow-up. Implications for enabling children to deploy the growing understanding of their worlds in a more prosocial way are discussed.

Keywords

Deception
Sharing
Theory of mind
Preschoolers
Microgenetic design

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