Turning a Blind Eye? Punishment of Friends and Unfamiliar Peers After Observed Exclusion in Adolescence
Empirical Articles
Male
Adolescent
Psychology, Adolescent
05 social sciences
Friends
16. Peace & justice
Altruism
Peer Group
3. Good health
Psychological Distance
Humans
Female
Interpersonal Relations
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
10. No inequality
DOI:
10.1111/jora.12401
Publication Date:
2018-04-27T05:36:01Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
In order to decrease the occurrence of social exclusion in adolescence, we need to better understand how adolescents perceive and behave toward peers involved in exclusion. We examined the role of friendships in treatment of perpetrators and victims of social exclusion. Eighty‐nine participants (aged 9–16) observed exclusion of an unfamiliar peer (victim) by their best friend and another unfamiliar peer. Subsequently, participants could give up valuable coins to altruistically punish or help peers. Results showed that participants altruistically compensated victims and punished unfamiliar excluders, but refrained from punishing their friends. Our findings show that friendship with excluders modulates altruistic punishment of peers and provide mechanistic insight into how friendships may influence treatment of peers involved in social exclusion during adolescence.
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CITATIONS (3)
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