Young children are intrinsically motivated to see others helped.
about
A construct divided: prosocial behavior as helping, sharing, and comforting subtypesPupillary motility: bringing neuroscience to the psychiatry clinic of the futureInfants help a non-human agentRudimentary sympathy in preverbal infants: preference for others in distressEmpathy as a driver of prosocial behaviour: highly conserved neurobehavioural mechanisms across speciesYoung Children Want to See Others Get the Help They Need.The Motivational Foundations of Prosocial Behavior From A Developmental Perspective-Evolutionary Roots and Key Psychological Mechanisms: Introduction to the Special Section.The Early Emergence of Guilt-Motivated Prosocial Behavior.Children's Intrinsic Motivation to Provide Help Themselves After Accidentally Harming Others.Novel paradigms to measure variability of behavior in early childhood: posture, gaze, and pupil dilation.Prospective thinking and decision making in primary school age children.Young children are more generous when others are aware of their actions.Parents' empathic perspective taking and altruistic behavior predicts infants' arousal to others' emotions.Roots and Benefits of Costly Giving: Children Who Are More Altruistic Have Greater Autonomic Flexibility and Less Family Wealth.The Developing Social Context of Infant Helping in Two U.S. SamplesYou get what you get and you don't throw a fit!: Emotion socialization and child physiology jointly predict early prosocial development.Others' emotions teach, but not in autism: an eye-tracking pupillometry studyDoes anyone need help? Age and gender effects on children's ability to recognize need-of-help.Beyond good and evil: what motivations underlie children's prosocial behavior?Pupillometry.What You Want Versus What's Good for You: Paternalistic Motivation in Children's Helping Behavior.The emergence of human prosociality: aligning with others through feelings, concerns, and normsIntrinsic Altruism or Social Motivation-What Does Pupil Dilation Tell Us about Children's Helping Behavior?Toddlers Help a Peer.Infants Understand Others' Needs.No Evidence of Emotional Dysregulation or Aversion to Mutual Gaze in Preschoolers with Autism Spectrum Disorder: An Eye-Tracking Pupillometry Study.Young children care more about their reputation with ingroup members and potential reciprocators.Cues to Action as Motivators for Children's Brushing.The Benefits of Benevolence: Basic Psychological Needs, Beneficence, and the Enhancement of Well-Being.Giving preschoolers choice increases sharing behavior.Pupillary Contagion in Infancy: Evidence for Spontaneous Transfer of Arousal.Happily Unhelpful: Infants' Everyday Helping and its Connections to Early Prosocial Development
P2860
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P2860
Young children are intrinsically motivated to see others helped.
description
2012 nî lūn-bûn
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2012年の論文
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2012年学术文章
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2012年学术文章
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2012年学术文章
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2012年学术文章
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2012年学术文章
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2012年学术文章
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2012年學術文章
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2012年學術文章
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Young children are intrinsically motivated to see others helped.
@en
Young children are intrinsically motivated to see others helped.
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type
label
Young children are intrinsically motivated to see others helped.
@en
Young children are intrinsically motivated to see others helped.
@nl
prefLabel
Young children are intrinsically motivated to see others helped.
@en
Young children are intrinsically motivated to see others helped.
@nl
P2860
P356
P1476
Young children are intrinsically motivated to see others helped.
@en
P2093
Amrisha Vaish
Robert Hepach
P2860
P304
P356
10.1177/0956797612440571
P577
2012-07-31T00:00:00Z