Older children verify adult claims because they are skeptical of those claims |
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Authors: | Samantha Cottrell Eric Torres Paul L Harris Samuel Ronfard |
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Institution: | 1. University of Toronto Mississauga, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada;2. Harvard Graduate School of Education, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA |
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Abstract: | We investigated children's information seeking in response to a surprising claim (Study 1, N = 109, 54 Female, Range = 4.02—6.94 years, 49% White, 21% Mixed Ethnicity, 19% Southeast Asian, September 2019—March 2020; Study 2, N = 154, 74 Female, Range = 4.09—7.99, 50% White, 20% Mixed Ethnicity, 17% Southeast Asian, September 2020—December 2020). Relative to younger children, older children more often expressed skepticism about the adult's surprising claims (1-year increase, OR = 2.70) and more often suggested exploration strategies appropriate for testing the specific claim they heard (1-year increase, OR = 1.42). Controlling for age, recommending more targeted exploration strategies was associated with a greater likelihood of expressing skepticism about the adult's claim. |
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