TY - GEN
T1 - The Role of Conflicting Cues in Children's Partner Selection
AU - Cakmak, Fatma Sila
AU - Ruggeri, Azzurra
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 IEEE.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Much of what we learn and do-especially as children-relies on others, making it essential to be selective and efficient when deciding whom to cooperate with and learn from. Even preschoolers can recognize domain-specific competencies and prefer partners whose knowledge and skills are most relevant to the task at hand [1]. Previous literature also shows that children adjust their reliance on different agents depending on their goals [2]. However, the mechanisms that support children's partner preferences and selective learning are still unclear. The current study examines whether and to what extent children adapt their partner selection based on agent characteristics and task relevancy. In a withinsubjects design, 3- to 7-year-old children (N=123; Female=70) are presented with two phases. In the Baseline phase, they encounter two agents; one knowledgeable and the other not. Children are presented with two conditions: (1) Information condition, and (2) Partner condition. During each condition, children are presented with (1) a Competence-Relevant trial; and (2) a Competence-Irrelevant trial and asked for their partner choice. In the Contrast phase, children are introduced to a second characteristic, helpfulness, with the knowledgeable agent being unhelpful and the unknowledgeable agent being helpful. The Contrast phase follows the same structure but contrasts competence with helpfulness. Results suggest that by age 5, children begin considering multiple agent characteristics, but effective use of these characteristics in context possibly emerges later in development, around age 7. Children thus learn to adopt their partner choices depending on context-specific task relevance with age.
AB - Much of what we learn and do-especially as children-relies on others, making it essential to be selective and efficient when deciding whom to cooperate with and learn from. Even preschoolers can recognize domain-specific competencies and prefer partners whose knowledge and skills are most relevant to the task at hand [1]. Previous literature also shows that children adjust their reliance on different agents depending on their goals [2]. However, the mechanisms that support children's partner preferences and selective learning are still unclear. The current study examines whether and to what extent children adapt their partner selection based on agent characteristics and task relevancy. In a withinsubjects design, 3- to 7-year-old children (N=123; Female=70) are presented with two phases. In the Baseline phase, they encounter two agents; one knowledgeable and the other not. Children are presented with two conditions: (1) Information condition, and (2) Partner condition. During each condition, children are presented with (1) a Competence-Relevant trial; and (2) a Competence-Irrelevant trial and asked for their partner choice. In the Contrast phase, children are introduced to a second characteristic, helpfulness, with the knowledgeable agent being unhelpful and the unknowledgeable agent being helpful. The Contrast phase follows the same structure but contrasts competence with helpfulness. Results suggest that by age 5, children begin considering multiple agent characteristics, but effective use of these characteristics in context possibly emerges later in development, around age 7. Children thus learn to adopt their partner choices depending on context-specific task relevance with age.
KW - flexible
KW - partner choice
KW - selective
KW - social interaction
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105021838243
U2 - 10.1109/ICDL63968.2025.11204418
DO - 10.1109/ICDL63968.2025.11204418
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:105021838243
T3 - IEEE International Conference on Development and Learning, ICDL
BT - 2025 IEEE International Conference on Development and Learning, ICDL 2025
PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
T2 - 2025 IEEE International Conference on Development and Learning, ICDL 2025
Y2 - 16 September 2025 through 19 September 2025
ER -