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Trust perception in Syrian refugee children.

Yulan D Chen1, Lina Qtaishat2, Matteo Lisi3

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Syrian refugee children

Keywords:
DisplacementRefugee childrenmental healthtrust biastrust perception

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Social Science
  • Developmental Psychology

Background:

  • Trust judgments are crucial for psychosocial development.
  • Trust biases are linked to psychopathology risk, especially in vulnerable populations.
  • Trust perception in refugee contexts is understudied.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To measure trust perception in Syrian refugee children displaced in Jordan.
  • To investigate associations between trust perception and mental health.
  • To examine age-related changes in trust perception.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized a validated trust task with computer-generated faces.
  • Assessed trust perception in 324 Syrian refugee children (mean age 6.32 years).
  • Collected maternal reports on child/maternal mental health and mother-child relationship.

Main Results:

  • Child trust perception was not associated with mental health or relationship quality.
  • Older children perceived faces as less trustworthy than younger children.
  • Trust perception decreased with age in this refugee population.

Conclusions:

  • Refugee children's mental health does not appear linked to trust perception.
  • Trust in others may diminish with age among displaced, at-risk children.
  • Further research is needed on social judgments in refugee populations.