4.5 Article

Effects of Rhythmic Turn-Taking Coordination on Five-Year-Old Children's Prosocial Behaviors

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 11, Pages 1787-1795

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/dev0001244

Keywords

coordination; joint action; music; prosocial behaviors; rhythmic activity

Funding

  1. Chinese Academy of Sciences [E0ZZ0320, E0CX172008]
  2. National Social Science Foundation of China [14ZDB161, 19ZDA021]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study shows that fine-grained coordination in rhythmic activities increases prosocial behavior in children, making them more willing to help and share. This suggests that coordination is an integral part of the prosocial mechanism and the effects extend beyond just coperformers to influence interactions with unknown strangers.
Rhythmic activities such as joint music-making and synchronous moving are known to produce prosocial effects in both adults and children, but the underlying mechanism remains unclear. One possible mechanism is that the time-locked, fine-grained coordination characteristic of rhythmic activities plays a key role in producing powerful prosocial effects. The present study investigated how coordination in a joint music-making task would influence kindergarteners' prosociality toward both coperformers and unaffiliated strangers. The study involved 138 Chinese children (72 girls, M = 5 years and 6 months, range = 5.0 to 6.0 years) from urban middle-class families. Participants were paired and instructed to play percussion instruments in alternation accompanying a song. In the fine-grained coordination condition, the dyad alternated every measure, resulting in a moment-to-moment coordinative experience; in the coarse-grained coordination condition where the coordination was sparser, the dyad alternated every eight measures. Children in the fine-grained coordination condition were subsequently more willing to help their partner complete a block-assembly task and more generous in sharing stickers with unknown children in a dictator game, compared with children in the coarse-grained coordination condition. These findings demonstrate that fine-grained coordination in rhythmic activities increases prosociality above and beyond having a shared goal of coperforming, supporting that coordination is an integral part of the prosocial mechanism. The prosocial effects of joint rhythmic activities generalized beyond the coperformers to anonymous strangers, indicating that the role of coordination may change from directing specific bonding in infancy to encouraging general prosociality from early childhood and onward.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available