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The role of expectations in children's experience of novel events
Authors:Suzanne T Gurland  Wendy S Grolnick  Rachel W Friendly
Institution:Department of Psychology, Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT 05753, USA. Electronic address: sgurland@middlebury.edu.
Abstract:The expectations children bring to interactions, as well as the information they receive prior to them, may be important for children's experiences of new adults. In this study, 148 children (8-13years old) reported on their expectations of adults, received one of three types of information about a new adult (positive, realistic, or control), and then "interacted" with a videotaped "controlling" adult. The effect of information type depended on children's age and prior expectations, with expectancy effects emerging in the context of positive information at the younger end of our age range and in the context of realistic information at the older end of our age range. Furthermore, the more expectations exceeded perceptions (i.e., the more disappointment), the lower children's rapport, affect, and prosocial intentions were and the more internal causal attributions they made. Results are discussed in terms of their theoretical and applied contributions.
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