Beliefs about the controllability of social characteristics and children's jealous responses to outsiders' interference in friendship

  • Although some jealous children respond to outsider interference in friendships with problem solving and discussion, others withdraw from the relationship or retaliate against the friends or others. Beliefs about the nature of social characteristics are proposed as an explanation for behavioral heterogeneity in response to jealous provocation. Based on learned helplessness theory and research on children's implicit personality theories, children who subscribed strongly to the belief that social characteristics are fixed and that social outcomes are uncontrollable (high entity beliefs), were expected to more strongly endorse asocial and antisocial responses and less strongly endorse prosocial responses to outsider interference than children who did not have strong entity beliefs, depending on their internal versus external attributions of blame. Two hundred eighty-six children in sixth through eighth grades (primarily Caucasian) participated in an experimental test of this hypothesis. Although hypothesized interactions between beliefs and locus of blame were not supported, results indicated that children who believe social characteristics are changeable also believed they had more control in the internal condition than children who believe social characteristics are immutable. Further, pessimistic children were more likely to tend to endorse asocial and antisocial behavior and less likely to endorse prosocial behavior than optimistic children.

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Metadaten
Author:Kristen Lee LavalleeORCiDGND, Jeffrey G. ParkerGND
URN:urn:nbn:de:hbz:294-76668
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209845
Parent Title (English):PLoS ONE
Publisher:Public Library of Science
Place of publication:San Francisco
Document Type:Article
Language:English
Date of Publication (online):2020/11/25
Date of first Publication:2019/01/16
Publishing Institution:Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Universitätsbibliothek
Volume:14
Issue:1, Article e0209845
First Page:e0209845-1
Last Page:e0209845-18
Institutes/Facilities:Lehrstuhl für Klinische Kinder- und Jugendpsychologie
open_access (DINI-Set):open_access
Licence (English):License LogoCreative Commons - CC BY 4.0 - Attribution 4.0 International