幼児期の対人葛藤場面における加害行為の意図性が介入・謝罪に及ぼす影響

広島大学心理学研究 15 号 129-145 頁 2016-03-31 発行
アクセス数 : 1403
ダウンロード数 : 524

今月のアクセス数 : 4
今月のダウンロード数 : 1
ファイル情報(添付)
HPR_15_129.pdf 10.5 MB 種類 : 全文
タイトル ( jpn )
幼児期の対人葛藤場面における加害行為の意図性が介入・謝罪に及ぼす影響
タイトル ( eng )
The influence of intention in conflict on the interventions and apologies of children in virtual conflict situations
作成者
井上 紗夫里
片岡 基明
収録物名
広島大学心理学研究
Hiroshima Psychological Research
15
開始ページ 129
終了ページ 145
収録物識別子
[PISSN] 1347-1619
[EISSN] 2759-0968
[NCID] AA11616129
抄録
To examine the influence of intention in conflict on the interventions and apologies of children in virtual conflict situations, we conducted experiments with 3- and 5-year-old girls and boys. Our findings suggest that the conflict's intention reflected the interventions, apologies and reasons. An age difference was observed. Five-year-old children gave more effective answers to resolve conflict situations, using both interventions and apologies more than the 3 year-old children. When asked about such interventions and apologies, many 5-year-old children suggested reasons that were focused on the victim's feelings and accepted responsibility for the conflict or expressed a sense of guilt. In contrast, many 3-year-olds decided their behaviors based on roles or evaluations of others. Furthermore, gender differences were observed Most of the girls selected an impartial intervention between victim and attacker; in contrast, many of the boys selected an intervention that supported only the victim. As an attacker, most girls answered apologetically. When questioned about such interventions and apologies, many girls made judgements of right and wrong themselves and accepted responsibility for the conflict or expressed a sense of guilt. In contrast, many of the boys decided their behaviors from the evaluations of others.
著者キーワード
children
conflict
intention
intervention
apology
NDC分類
心理学 [ 140 ]
言語
日本語
資源タイプ 紀要論文
出版者
広島大学大学院教育学研究科心理学講座
発行日 2016-03-31
出版タイプ Version of Record(出版社版。早期公開を含む)
アクセス権 オープンアクセス
収録物識別子
[ISSN] 1347-1619
[NCID] AA11616129