Children’s understanding of counterfactual and temporal relief in others

Matthew Johnston, Teresa McCormack, Agnieszka Graham, Sara Lorimer, Sarah R. Beck, Christoph Hoerl, Aidan Feeney

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Developmentalists have investigated relief as a counterfactually mediated emotion, but not relief experienced when negative events end, so-called temporal relief. This study represents the first body of work to investigate the development of children’s understanding of temporal relief and compare it to their understanding of counterfactual relief. Across four experiments (407 children aged 4-11 years and 60 adults, 52% female), we examined children’s ability to attribute counterfactual and temporal relief to others. In Experiment 1, 7-10-year-olds typically judged that two characters would feel equally happy despite avoiding or enduring an event that was unpleasant for one character. Using forced-choice procedures, Experiments 2 to 4 showed that a fledgling ability to attribute relief to others emerges between 5-6 years and that the tendency to make these attributions increases with age. The experiments in this study provide the first positive evidence in the literature as to when children can begin to attribute both counterfactual and temporal instances relief to others. Overall, there was little evidence for separate developmental trajectories for understanding counterfactual and temporal relief although in Experiment 4 there was an indication that, under scaffolded contexts, some children find it easier to attribute counterfactual rather than temporal relief to others.
Original languageEnglish
Article number105491
Number of pages32
JournalJournal of Experimental Child Psychology
Volume223
Early online date2 Jul 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished (in print/issue) - 30 Nov 2022

Data Access Statement

Data, analysis code, and OpenSesame files are available on the Open Science Framework (
https://osf.io/mhdy7/?view_only=c992fc78b0fc44e891685b73c131d89b
).

Keywords

  • Relief
  • Counterfactual Thinking
  • Temporal cognition
  • Emotion understanding
  • Complex Emotions

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