Toddlers Prefer Agents Who Help Those Facing Harder Tasks

Author:

Woo Brandon M.12ORCID,Liu Shari3,Gweon Hyowon4,Spelke Elizabeth S.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA

2. The Center for Brains, Minds, and Machines, Cambridge, MA, USA

3. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA

4. Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Capacities to understand and evaluate others’ actions are fundamental to human social life. Infants and toddlers are sensitive to the costs of others’ actions, infer others’ values from the costs of the actions they take, and prefer those who help others to those who hinder them, but it is largely unknown whether and how cost considerations inform early understanding of third-party prosocial actions. In three experiments (N = 94), we asked whether 16-month-old toddlers value agents who selectively help those who need it most. Presented with two agents who attempted two tasks, toddlers preferentially looked to and touched someone who helped the agent in greater need, both when one agent’s task required more effort and when the tasks were the same but one agent was weaker. These results provide evidence that toddlers engage in need-based evaluations of helping, applying their understanding of action utilities to their social evaluations.

Funder

National Science Foundation STC

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Doctoral Fellowship

Publisher

MIT Press

Reference52 articles.

1. Preschoolers consider expected task difficulty to decide what to do and whom to help;Bennett-Pierre,2018

2. Young children consider the expected utility of others’ learning to decide what to teach;Bridgers;Nature Human Behaviour,2020

3. Do infants in the first year of life expect equal resource allocations?;Buyukozer Dawkins;Frontiers in Psychology,2019

4. Understanding preferences in infancy;Choi;Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Cognitive Science,2023

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