Abstract
In a series of two experiments, we examined 5-year-old children's motivations for learning new conventional actions. Children watched two teachers open a novel container; the teachers differed in the nonfunctional, conventional actions they used in the process. In Experiment 1, one teacher spoke with a native accent and the other spoke with a nonnative accent. Children showed a preference for following the native-accented teacher, and this preference was interpreted as a motivation to match an in-group member. In Experiment 2, the speech accent of the teacher was crossed with explicit expressions of (un)certainty by the teachers. In this case, children preferred the more certain teacher, even when the certain teacher spoke with a nonnative speech accent. This preference was taken as demonstrating a utilitarian motivation that led to choosing the teacher most likely to have useful information. Taken together, these results suggest that by 5 years of age, children are motivated by both utilitarian and in-group considerations when selecting between sources of information; however, when forced to select between the two motivations, utilitarian concerns take precedent.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Special thanks to Sarah Bibyk, Mariana Vega-Mendoza, Suzanne Van Horn, Emily Dorrian, Sarah Lautenbauch, and especially to Elaine Aldana. We also thank the Columbus Center of Science and Industry.
Notes
Color versions of one or more of the figures in the article can be found online at www.tandfonline.com/hjcd.