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The Journal of Genetic Psychology
Research and Theory on Human Development
Volume 171, 2010 - Issue 4
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ARTICLES

The Semantics of Secrecy: Young Children's Classification of Secret Content

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Pages 279-299 | Received 28 Apr 2009, Accepted 10 May 2009, Published online: 06 Nov 2010
 

ABSTRACT

The authors explored whether young children can distinguish potential secrets from nonsecrets by their content, as can older children, adolescents, and adults. Ninety children, 4, 5, and 6 years old, rated the secrecy of items from an adult-validated list of personal information about an age- and gender-appropriate puppet. Two factors of the children's data corresponded to the adult categories of nonsecrets and secrets, and a third factor corresponded to surprises. All ages rated surprises as significantly more secret than nonsecret items; however, the surprise items contained linguistic cues to secrecy. A tendency to rate nonsecrets as secret decreased with age, but only the 6-year-olds rated secrets other than surprises as significantly more secret than nonsecrets. Thus, children acquire the implicit rules defining secret content from a somewhat later age than that reported for the cognitive or behavioral capacities for secrecy.

Notes

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