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Children's reasoning about self-presentation following rule violations: the role of self-focused attention

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-08, 13:36 authored by Robin BanerjeeRobin Banerjee, Mark Bennett, Nikki Luke
Rule violations are likely to serve as key contexts for learning to reason about public identity. In an initial study with 91 children aged 49 years, social emotions and self-presentational concerns were more likely to be cited when children were responding to hypothetical vignettes involving social-conventional rather than moral violations. In 2 further studies with 376 children aged 49 years, experimental manipulations of self-focused attention (either by leading children to believe they were being video-recorded or by varying audience reactions to transgressions) were found to elicit greater attention to social evaluation following moral violations, although self-presentational concerns were consistently salient in the context of social-conventional violations. The role of rule transgressions in childrens emerging self-awareness and social understanding is discussed

History

Publication status

  • Published

Journal

Child Development

ISSN

0009-3920

Publisher

Wiley

Issue

5

Volume

83

Page range

1805-1821

Department affiliated with

  • Psychology Publications

Notes

003UE Times Cited:0 Cited References Count:61

Full text available

  • No

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2012-11-14

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