Author:
Westhoff Bianca,Molleman Lucas,Viding Essi,van den Bos Wouter,van Duijvenvoorde Anna C. K.
Abstract
AbstractLearning to successfully navigate social environments is a critical developmental goal, predictive of long-term wellbeing. However, little is known about how people learn to adjust to different social environments, and how this behaviour emerges across development. Here, we use a series of economic games to assess how children, adolescents, and young adults learn to adjust to social environments that differ in their level of cooperation (i.e., trust and coordination). Our results show an asymmetric developmental pattern: adjustment requiring uncooperative behaviour remains constant across adolescence, but adjustment requiring cooperative behaviour improves markedly across adolescence. Behavioural and computational analyses reveal that age-related differences in this social learning are shaped by age-related differences in the degree of inequality aversion and in the updating of beliefs about others. Our findings point to early adolescence as a phase of rapid change in cooperative behaviours, and highlight this as a key developmental window for interventions promoting well-adjusted social behaviour.
Funder
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Economic and Social Research Council
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
16 articles.
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