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Advanced Developmental Psychology

This overview explores the development of prosociality and empathy, including its roots in infancy, the impact of autism and maltreatment, peer effects, and the role of emotion recognition. It also examines family factors and cross-cultural influences on prosocial behavior and discusses the importance of effortful control and morality in promoting empathy. The impact of oxytocin and the role of effortful control in development are also discussed.

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Advanced Developmental Psychology

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  1. PSY 620P Advanced Developmental Psychology

  2. Daniel Messinger, Ph.D. Prosociality, Morality, and Effects of Abuse Empathy h/t Sarah

  3. Overview • Prosociality/empathy • Developmental overview • Roots in infancy • Autism • Effortful control • Cowell & Decety • Maltreatment • Peer effects • Emotion recognition effects

  4. Prosocial integrative model • Rises with age • Stronger in girls • Influenced by sociability, social competence, regulation of emotion • “Some consistency” in prosocial behavior • Strong situational influences • Diverse measures

  5. Cross-cultural • Cultures in which children are more pro-social tend to involve extended families, strong female role, less division of labor • Reciprocal prosocial obligations valued as/more highly than individual obligation

  6. Family factors • Good parenting  good empathy • Empathy springs from brain-based caregiving systems associated with mothering/parenting • De Waal; Panksepp (706) • Siblings caring for younger sibs • Kochanska

  7. Discipline • Inductive parenting– ‘How do you think David feels?’ linked to pro-social behavior/sympathy • Power assertive techniques do not work as a modal technique, but can be important in a more reciprocal context • Authoritative parenting – warmth and control • Regulation of negative emotion • Plus role modeling for optimal prosociality • And providing early pro-social opportunities • Foot-in-the-door technique

  8. Morality is implicitly interactive Acting with respect to the expectations of a generalized other—norms—expecting one’s actions to affect others.

  9. “Participating in a synchronous exchange may sensitize infants to the emotional resonance and empathy underlying human relationships across the life span.” Feldman, 2007

  10. Reunion

  11. Early mother-infant synchrony  2 year self-control • Maternal synchronization at 3 months • Faster is better • Mutual synchronization at 9 months • More important for difficult temperament kids • Feldman et al 1999 • Mother-infant synchrony  dialogical empathy at 6/13 years • Feldman, 2007

  12. Empathic Responding

  13. Cooperation

  14. Empathy  Autism Symptoms McDonald & Messinger, 2012

  15. Prosocial behavior • Voluntary behavior intended to benefit another • Empathy – • Understanding-based feeling of what other is feeling • Sympathy – • Sorrow/concern for other • Linked to helping, HR down • Different from personal distress – • Self-focused aversive negative emotional reaction to other • Linked to getting out of there, HR up • So regulating negative emotion is important

  16. Lower empathy expression at 4-6 years, but normative prosociality McDonald et al., 2015

  17. Lower increase in ASD compliance from 2 – 3 years Ekas, et al., 2017

  18. Oxytocin * Interaction  Empathy OXTR rs53576 children with the GG genotype appeared more susceptible to dyadic interaction quality than children with the AG genotype McDonald, et al., 2016

  19. Effortful control • “[A] child's ability to inhibit a readily available, prepotent response or to stop an ongoing response to perform instead a more appropriately modulated response is implicated in multiple developmental processes and considered a hallmark in socialization.” • Typically viewed as a temperamental characteristic • Murray & Kochanska, 2002

  20. By 45 months, effortful control stable longitudinally & across tasks • Less intense proneness to anger & joy, and more inhibited to unfamiliar in 2nd year  higher effortful control. • Higher effortful control (22–45 months)  stronger conscience at 56 months & fewer externalizing problems at 73 months. • Effortful control mediated the oft-reported relations between maternal power assertion and impaired conscience development in children, even controlling for child management difficulty. Kochanska, G., & Knaack, A. (2003). Effortful control as a personality characteristic of young children: antecedents, correlates, and consequences. J Pers, 71(6), 1087-1112.

  21. Remember…. • GRAZYNA KOCHANSKA, REBECCA L. BROCK, AND LEA J. BOLDT

  22. Background: babies tend to be positive • Preferential looking-time, violation-of-expectation tasks, and behavioral observations show that infants < 2 yr act prosocially and prefer prosocial (rather than antisocial) others • 3-mo-olds preferentially attend to a prosocial character • By 6 months, infants selectively attend to and approach prosocial agents • Neural and environmental mechanisms underlying their emergence remain unclear

  23. What we do know so far: • Frontal power density asymmetry during rest and while viewing emotional stimuli is related to individual differences in emotion regulation, motivational processes, and social behavior • Possible that dispositions in parents shape children’s prosocial behavior and neural responses during third-party evaluations of social interaction • Parent/child value transmission = Gene x Environment interaction

  24. Current Study • To investigate the link between the neural processing of third-party social evaluations and actual moral preferences and prosocial behaviors in infants and toddlers, and their link to parental values • Combined EEG with eye-tracking, behavioral measures, and parental and children’s dispositions

  25. Hypotheses • Infants would differentiate between characters that helped another and characters that hindered another, indexed by EEG frontal asymmetry • Infants’ early, automatic, and later controlled time-locked neural responses to the perception of social interactions of others would predict their character preference • Parental dispositions would predict children’s neural processing of moral scenarios and their sharing behavior

  26. Methods • 73 children: ages 12-24 months • Parents completed questionnaire • Early Childhood Behavior Questionnaire-VSF • Sensitivity to Justice Scale (short) • Interpersonal Reactivity Index • Social Evaluation Task (SET) • EEG & eye-tracking • Preferential Reaching Paradigm • 4-min resting state EEG • Chicago Moral Sensitivity Task (CMST) • EEG & eye-tracking • Sharing game

  27. Results • No evidence of preferential reaching for prosocial character – (27 helper vs. 27 hinderer) • Near-equal numbers of children shared vs. did not share at least one toy (37 share vs. 34 no share) • Sharing associated with effortful control, but not positive or negative affect • Sharing associated with parent’s perspective-taking and (negatively) with parent’s personal distress

  28. Results from SET • Greater cortical activation in helping vs. hindering condition • Greater left frontal asymmetry when viewing hindering vs. helping • Consistent with activation of avoidance response • Greater fixation on agent of helping vs. receiver of help • But no greater fixation on prosocial vs. antisocial action

  29. Results from CMST • Greater amplitude for prosocial vs. antisocial scenes (parietal region; 300-500ms) • More computation required to process the prosocial, or the prosocial is more novel • No differences found 200-300ms (early window), or 600-1000ms (late window) • Prosocial reaching preferences predicted by individual differences in activation when perceiving helpful vs. harmful behavior (200-500ms & 600-1000ms) • Those individual differences in turn were predicted by parental sensitivity to injustice (300-500ms only)

  30. Results From CMST

  31. Results From CMST Social preferences associated with neural activation during CMST

  32. Conclusions • Infants and toddlers distinguish between prosocial & antisocial acts • The distinctions appear rooted in basic processes of approach/withdrawal tendencies and attention • Good behaviors are more novel  elicit additional computations • Bad behaviors are more common  prompt an automatic response • Increased recruitment of resources/computations in processing the anticipation of prosocial outcomes compared with antisocial outcomes

  33. Discussion Questions • What would contribute to such an early parent-child reflection of moral values? • How might these contributions be different for children with developmental disorders? • Do you think the processes and mechanisms of moral evaluation in young kids maintain with their increasing age?

  34. Maltreatment

  35. Family environment and maltreatment • Patterns seen across maltreatment types • Family environment of coercion and abuse of power • Lower levels of prosocial behavior and verbal communication • Undervaluing of children • Deviant affective displays • Maternal intrusiveness and non-responsiveness

  36. Overlap with risky behaviors • Increased likelihood to engage in a greater array of risky behaviors • Certain types of maltreatment associated with a greater number of sexual partners and heavier alcohol consumption • Adult survivors likely to engage in substance abuse, criminal and antisocial behavior, and eating disorders

  37. Social development and abuse • Maltreated children often suffer from low self-esteem, self-blame, and negative affect toward self • Abuse negatively impacts peer relationships particularly if its frequent and of long duration • The longer maltreatment occurs, the greater the likelihood of peer rejection, perhaps because of tendency to engage in coercive, aggressive interactions with peers as result of abuse • Though a strong friendship may attenuate this relationship • Investigated with 107 children experiencing various types of abuse and 107 comparison children between 2nd and 7th grade • Bolger et al 1998

  38. Specificity of abuse effects • Sexual abuse predicted low self-esteem • but not peer relationship problems. • Emotional maltreatment was related to difficulties in peer relationships • but not to low self-esteem. • For some groups of maltreated children, having a good friend was associated with improvement over time in self-esteem. • Bolger et al., 1998

  39. Chronically maltreated kids likely to be rejected by peers • Maltreatment chronicity  higher levels of aggressive behavior • reported by peers, teachers, and children • Aggressive behavior accounted for association of maltreatment and rejection. • Withdrawn behavior associated with peer rejection • but doesn’t account for association of chronic maltreatment & rejection. • Bolger & Patterson, 2001

  40. Maltreatment, aggression, & rejection

  41. Maltreatment  Aggression Results hold for girls and boys • Bolger & Patterson, 2001

  42. Does abuse predict malfunction? • Many children/ adolescents who suffer maltreatment become well-functioning adults • Maltreatment can result in significant negative consequences that continue into adulthood • Although many survivors function well in adulthood, others suffer serious psychological distress and disturbance

  43. Possible buffers • Maltreating parents may fail to produce opportunities for positive social interaction for their children • Opportunities found elsewhere (i.e., other family members, friends, teachers, etc.) • Maltreated children with best friends are more likely to experience increased self-esteem and self-concept than other maltreated children

  44. Abused see more anger 8-11-year-olds Pollak & Tolley-Schell, 2003

  45. sadness At expense of ? Pollak & Tolley-Schell, 2003

  46. Heart rate in response to… Time only for non-abused • Active anger: Large initial deceleration for abused & non-abused children • Attentional orienting response • Unresolved anger: Eventual recovery from initial deceleration (only group effect, p<.05) • Resolution: Greaterrecovery for non-abused than abused children (bpm) Group, p<.05 Pollak, Vardi, Bechner, & Curtin (2005). Physically Abused

  47. Impact on emotion recognition • Influence of early adverse experience on children's selective attention to threat-related signals is a mechanism in the development of psychopathology. • As children's experience varies, so will their interpretation of emotion expressions. • Pollak & Tolley-Schell. Journal of Abnormal Psychology. 112(3), Aug 2003, 323-338.

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