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The Effect of Action Valence and Race on 3- to 8-Year-Old Children's Social Cognitive Judgments
Authors:Martha E Arterberry  Brittany C Hughes  Barbara Mejia
Institution:1. Colby CollegeMartha.Arterberry@colby.edu;3. Colby College
Abstract:The present study investigated children's judgments of actions as a function of the valence of the action and the race of the actor. Three- to 8-year-old children were read an illustrated storybook in which 1 character did not share (a negatively valenced action) and the other character was helpful (a positively valenced action). The race of the characters was manipulated such that in the story, there was 1 Black character and 1 White character. Children were asked to make judgments about how mean/nice the characters were and what consequence (reward or punishment) they should receive for their actions. Despite the fact that children of this age show explicit and implicit pro-White biases (e.g., Baron & Banaji, 2006 Baron, A. S., & Banaji, M. R. (2006). The development of implicit attitudes: Evidence of race evaluations from ages 6 and 10 and adulthood. Psychological Science, 17, 5358. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9280.2005.01664.xCrossref], PubMed], Web of Science ®] Google Scholar]), children's judgments were based solely on the valence of action and not on character race. The findings are discussed in light of moral development and the development of bias as it pertains to race.
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