The Department of Cognitive Science
cordially invites you
to the public defense of the PhD thesis
Best behaviors:
Young children's understanding of helping actions,
its preconditions and consequences
by
Laura Schlingloff-Nemecz
TUESDAY, May 7, 2 P.M. CET|
Room D002 (CEU, Quellenstrasse 51, 1100 Vienna)
(Zoom: Meeting:
https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/98802680271?pwd=M2ZzMFdQc3M2NDRvVDgzZkNCN1RZdz09&…
Meeting ID: 988 0268 0271
Passcode: 803329
PRIMARY SUPERVISOR: Gergely Csibra (CEU)
SECONDARY SUPERVISOR: Christophe Heintz (CEU)
Advisors: Barbara Pomiechowska, Denis Tatone
Members of the Dissertation Committee:
Jozsef Fiser, Chair, CEU
Professor Lindsey
Powell<https://psychology.ucsd.edu/people/profiles/ljpowell.html>ml>,
External examiner, UCSD and
Professor Patricia
Kanngiesser<http://patriciakanngiesser.com/>m/>, External examiner,
University of Plymouth
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in Vienna must RSVP
here<https://forms.office.com/e/vthMfVPuXq> to get access to the lecture hall.
ABSTRACT |To become competent social agents, young children must make sense of the
frequently opaque behaviors of other people and draw appropriate conclusions from them.
This dissertation is about how infants and children understand other agents'
instrumental and social actions (specifically, helping) by using a naive utility calculus,
and the inferences they make from observed interactions to character traits. It comprises
three sections. Section 1 addresses whether infants possess a concept of choice, and use
it to generate the expectation that a goal-directed agent will choose the best of multiple
available
options, meaning the one that yields the highest rewards or requires the least cost to
bring about. We argue that this capacity is a precondition for a mature understanding of
helping, as the latter requires comparing the action options of the Helpee (contingent on
whether or not she receives help) and the Helper (insofar as her options relate to the
Helpee's outcome). To probe whether infants can compare alternatives of varying
utility, we conducted a set of looking-time and eye-tracking experiments testing whether
they think an agent should approach a relatively higher number of goal objects, or a goal
that
can be reached at relatively lower effort. Section 2 explores infants' and
children's understanding of helping actions. Specifically,
we ask whether they possess a utility-based concept of helping whereby the goal of a
Helper is to increase the utility the Helpee obtains in reaching her goal. To approach
this question empirically, we ran a series of looking-time experiments with infants, as
well as an experiment with preschoolers probing what they mean by the term
"helping". We also report a replication attempt of Hamlin et al.'s (2007)
finding that infants prefer Helpers, a paradigm often used to probe their understanding of
helping actions.
Finally, Section 3 investigates whether children interpret third-party social interactions
by spontaneously ascribing character traits to agents, and choose partners for their own
cooperative endeavors accordingly. While it has been argued that young children, upon
observing helping events, ascribe a stable prosocial disposition to a Helper, we maintain
that it is unclear whether they do so spontaneously. We developed a tablet-based
collaborative foraging game where the player first observes agents differing in
helpfulness and skill, subsequently selects one of the previously seen agents as a
partner, and plays together with the chosen partner. We used this game to study partner
choice in 5- to 10- year-old children and adults across two cultural contexts
(Hungary/Austria and Japan). The research described in this dissertation thus aims to shed
light on the mechanisms of early action understanding (i.e., whether infants consider
alternative possible goals), test whether a hierarchical action representation and naive
utility calculus underlie young children's reasoning about helping behaviors, and
investigate to what extent the observation of cooperative interactions from a third-party
perspective prompts children
to infer traits and informs their own social decision-making.
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