Welcome to PsychiatryAI.com: [PubMed] - Psychiatry AI Latest

Children’s distinct drive to reproduce costly rituals

Evidence

Child Dev. 2023 Dec 18. doi: 10.1111/cdev.14061. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Costly rituals are ubiquitous and adaptive. Yet, little is known about how children develop to acquire them. The current study examined children’s imitation of costly rituals. Ninety-three 4-6 year olds (47 girls, 45% Oceanians, tested in 2022) were shown how to place tokens into a tube to earn stickers, using either a ritualistic or non-ritualistic costly action sequence. Children shown the ritualistic actions imitated faithfully at the expense of gaining stickers; conversely, those shown the non-ritualistic actions ignored them and obtained maximum reward. This highlights how preschool children are adept at and motivated to learn rituals, despite significant material cost. This study provides insights into the early development of cultural learning and the adaptive value of rituals in group cognition.

PMID:38108221 | DOI:10.1111/cdev.14061

Document this CPD Copy URL Button

Google

Google Keep Add to Google Keep

LinkedIn Share Share on Linkedin Share on Linkedin

Estimated reading time: 3 minute(s)

Latest: Psychiatryai.com #RAISR4D

Cool Evidence: Engaging Young People and Students in Real-World Evidence ☀️

Real-Time Evidence Search [Psychiatry]

AI Research [Andisearch.com]

Children’s distinct drive to reproduce costly rituals

Copy WordPress Title

🌐 90 Days

Evidence Blueprint

Children’s distinct drive to reproduce costly rituals

QR Code

☊ AI-Driven Related Evidence Nodes

(recent articles with at least 5 words in title)

More Evidence

Children’s distinct drive to reproduce costly rituals

🌐 365 Days

Floating Tab
close chatgpt icon
ChatGPT

Enter your request.

Psychiatry AI RAISR 4D System Psychiatry + Mental Health