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Infants’ Social Evaluation of Helpers and Hinderers: A Large-Scale, Multi-Lab, Coordinated Replication Study

  • Kelsey Lucca
  • , Francis Yuen
  • , Yiyi Wang
  • , Nicolás Alessandroni
  • , Olivia Allison
  • , Mario Alvarez
  • , Emma L. Axelsson
  • , Janina Baumer
  • , Heidi A. Baumgartner
  • , Julie Bertels
  • , Mitali Bhavsar
  • , Krista Byers-Heinlein
  • , Arthur Capelier-Mourguy
  • , Hitomi Chijiiwa
  • , Chantelle S.S. Chin
  • , Natalie Christner
  • , Laura K. Cirelli
  • , John Corbit
  • , Moritz M. Daum
  • , Tiffany Doan
  • Michaela Dresel, Anna Exner, Wenxi Fei, Samuel H. Forbes, Laura Franchin, Michael C. Frank, Alessandra Geraci, Michelle Giraud, Megan E. Gornik, Charlotte Grosse Wiesmann, Tobias Grossmann, Isabelle M. Hadley, Naomi Havron, Annette M.E. Henderson, Emmy Higgs Matzner, Bailey A. Immel, Grzegorz Jankiewicz, Wiktoria Jędryczka, Yasuhiro Kanakogi, Jonathan F. Kominsky, Casey Lew-Williams, Zoe Liberman, Liquan Liu, Yilin Liu, Miriam T. Loeffler, Alia Martin, Julien Mayor, Xianwei Meng, Michal Misiak, David Moreau, Mira L. Nencheva, Linda S. Oña, Yenny Otálora, Markus Paulus, Bill Pepe, Charisse B. Pickron, Lindsey J. Powell, Marina Proft, Alyssa A. Quinn, Hannes Rakoczy, Peter J. Reschke, Ronit Roth-Hanania, Katrin Rothmaler, Karola Schlegelmilch, Laura Schlingloff-Nemecz, Mark A. Schmuckler, Tobias Schuwerk, Sabine Seehagen, Hilal H. Şen, Munna R. Shainy, Valentina Silvestri, Melanie Soderstrom, Jessica Sommerville, Hyun joo Song, Piotr Sorokowski, Sandro E. Stutz, Yanjie Su, Hernando Taborda-Osorio, Alvin W.M. Tan, Denis Tatone, Teresa Taylor-Partridge, Chiu Kin Adrian Tsang, Arkadiusz Urbanek, Florina Uzefovsky, Ingmar Visser, Annie E. Wertz, Madison Williams, Kristina Wolsey, Terry Tin Yau Wong, Amanda M. Woodward, Yang Wu, Zhen Zeng, Lucie Zimmer, J. Kiley Hamlin
  • Arizona State University
  • University of British Columbia
  • The University of Chicago
  • Concordia University
  • University of Virginia
  • University of Newcastle
  • University of Amsterdam
  • Stanford University
  • Université libre de Bruxelles
  • ARISA Foundation
  • Lancaster University
  • The University of Osaka
  • Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
  • University of Toronto
  • Saint Francis Xavier University
  • University of Zurich
  • Victoria University of Wellington
  • Ruhr University Bochum
  • Hong Kong Polytechnic University
  • Univ. of Durham
  • University of Trento
  • University of Catania
  • University of Milan - Bicocca
  • University of Manitoba
  • Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
  • University of Haifa
  • The University of Auckland
  • University of Minnesota Twin Cities
  • University of California at Santa Barbara
  • Wroclaw University Hospital
  • Central European University
  • Princeton University
  • University of Technology Sydney
  • Western Sydney University
  • University of Texas at Dallas
  • University of Oslo
  • Nagoya University
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  • Max Planck Institute for Human Development
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  • University of Göttingen
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  • Academic College of Tel-Aviv - Yaffo
  • Technical University of Munich
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  • Axxonet Brain Research Laboratory
  • Yonsei University
  • Peking University
  • University of the Incarnate Word
  • The University of Hong Kong
  • The Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research
  • Chinese University of Hong Kong

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Evaluating whether someone's behavior is praiseworthy or blameworthy is a fundamental human trait. A seminal study by Hamlin and colleagues in 2007 suggested that the ability to form social evaluations based on third-party interactions emerges within the first year of life: infants preferred a character who helped, over hindered, another who tried but failed to climb a hill. This sparked a new line of inquiry into the origins of social evaluations; however, replication attempts have yielded mixed results. We present a preregistered, multi-laboratory, standardized study aimed at replicating infants’ preference for Helpers over Hinderers. We intended to (1) provide a precise estimate of the effect size of infants’ preference for Helpers over Hinderers, and (2) determine the degree to which preferences are based on social information. Using the ManyBabies framework for big team-based science, we tested 1018 infants (567 included, 5.5–10.5 months) from 37 labs across five continents. Overall, 49.34% of infants preferred Helpers over Hinderers in the social condition, and 55.85% preferred characters who pushed up, versus down, an inanimate object in the nonsocial condition; neither proportion differed from chance or from each other. This study provides evidence against infants’ prosocial preferences in the hill paradigm, suggesting the effect size is weaker, absent, and/or develops later than previously estimated. As the first of its kind, this study serves as a proof-of-concept for using active behavioral measures (e.g., manual choice) in large-scale, multi-lab projects studying infants.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere13581
JournalDevelopmental Science
Volume28
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2025

Keywords

  • experimental methods
  • infancy
  • moral development
  • reproducibility
  • social cognition
  • social development

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