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Behavioral Assessment of Hearing in 2 to 4 Year-old Children: A Two-interval, Observer-based Procedure Using Conditioned Play-based Responses
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Overheard evaluative comments can affect young children's effort.

Fengling Ma1, Linghui Tang1, Yutong Jiang1

  • 1Department of Psychology, Zhejiang Sci-Tech University.

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|June 26, 2025
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Children learn effort by overhearing comments about others. Positive or even negative evaluations of waiting behavior encouraged children to wait longer, highlighting social learning in effort regulation.

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Area of Science:

  • Developmental Psychology
  • Social Psychology
  • Child Development

Background:

  • Children develop effort regulation by observing socially valued behaviors.
  • Overheard evaluative comments serve as a crucial information source for children's social learning.
  • Understanding how children interpret social feedback is key to their developmental trajectory.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how overheard evaluative comments influence children's effortful behavior.
  • To examine the specific impact of positive, negative, and neutral evaluations on children's willingness to exert effort.
  • To explore the role of social observation in shaping children's understanding of effort.

Main Methods:

  • Four studies were conducted with 5-year-old Chinese children (N=180).
  • Effort was operationalized as willingness to wait.
  • Participants were exposed to different types of overheard evaluative comments about another child's waiting behavior.

Main Results:

  • Overhearing positive comments about waiting increased children's waiting time.
  • Surprisingly, negative evaluations (e.g., 'not smart') also led to increased waiting.
  • Neutral or global negative comments had no significant effect on waiting behavior.

Conclusions:

  • Children's effort regulation is influenced by overheard social evaluations, even negative ones.
  • Social learning through observation plays a significant role in children's understanding and application of effort.
  • The specific nature of evaluative comments impacts how children internalize and display effortful behaviors.