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Children endorse deterrence motivations for third-party punishment but derive higher enjoyment from compensating victims.

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-13, 10:19 authored by Rhea Luana AriniRhea Luana Arini, M. Mahmood, J. Bocarejo Aljure, G. P. D. Ingram, L. Wiggs, K. Kenward

Children’s punishment behavior may be driven by both retribution and deterrence, but the potential primacy of either motive is unknown. Moreover, children’s punishment enjoyment and compensation enjoyment have never been directly contrasted. Here, British, Colombian, and Italian 7- to 11-year-old children (N = 123) operated a Justice System in which they viewed different moral transgressions in Minecraft, a globally popular video game, either face-to-face with an experimenter or over the internet. Children could respond to transgressions by punishing transgressors and compensating victims. The purpose of the system was framed in terms of retribution, deterrence, or compensationbetween participants. Children’s performance, endorsement, and enjoyment of punishment and compensation were measured, along with their endorsement of retribution versus deterrence as punishment justifications, during and/or after justice administration. Children overwhelmingly endorsed deterrence over retribution as their punishment justification irrespective of age. When asked to reproduce the presented frame in their own words, children more reliably reproduced the deterrence frame rather than the retribution frame. Punishment enjoyment decreased while compensation enjoyment increased over time. Despite enjoying compensation more, children preferentially endorsed punishment over compensation, especially with increasing age and transgression severity. Reported deterrent justifications, superior reproduction of deterrence framing, lower enjoyment of punishment than of compensation, and higher endorsement of punishment over compensation together suggest that children felt that they ought to mete out punishment as a means to deter future transgressions. Face-to-face and internet-mediated responses were not distinguishable, supporting a route to social psychology research with primary school-aged children unable to physically visit labs.

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Psychology (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of Experimental Child Psychology

Volume

230

Issue

105630

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

0022-0965

Date Submitted

2023-10-16

Date Accepted

2023-01-31

Date of First Publication

2023-01-31

Date of Final Publication

2023-06-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2023-09-29

ePrints ID

56500