Effects of Friends' Characteristics on Children's Social Cognitions |
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Authors: | Mara Brendgen,Francois Bowen,Normand Rondeau,& Frank Vitaro |
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Affiliation: | University of Montreal |
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Abstract: | Based on the notion that friends play a fundamental role in children's social cognitive development, the study investigates the relation between friends' characteristics (i.e., aggressiveness and prosociality) and children's interpretation of social cues and generation of responses in hypothetical provocation situations. The study was conducted with a sample of 322 children (155 boys, 167 girls) from first through sixth grade. The results showed that, for older children only, friends' aggressiveness predicted an increase of the frequency of aggressive solutions, whereas friends' prosociality predicted an increase of the frequency of pacifistic/prosocial solutions. The latter effect was only true for non-aggressive children, though. The results are discussed in terms of the possible mechanisms underlying the differential effects of friends' characteristics on children's social cognition. |
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Keywords: | Friendship Aggressiveness Prosociality Social Cognition |
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