Children's Developing Ability to Resolve Disagreements by Integrating Perspectives
- PMID: 34109611
- DOI: 10.1111/cdev.13603
Children's Developing Ability to Resolve Disagreements by Integrating Perspectives
Abstract
Children live in a world where disagreement is commonplace. Although disagreement can sometimes be explained by differences in people's reliability, disagreement may also indicate that the referent elicits multiple perspectives. The present studies (total N = 129, 5- to 12-year-old ethnically diverse U.S. children, 42% girls) examined children's ability to resolve disagreement among two individuals by identifying referents that integrated the perspectives, and considered the extent to which any age-related change could be explained by epistemological understanding (i.e., acknowledging that two perspectives can be right). Children's age was positively correlated with their ability to integrate perspectives, and children performed at above-chance levels by approximately 10 years of age. Age differences in integrating perspectives were partially accounted for by epistemological understanding.
© 2021 The Authors. Child Development © 2021 Society for Research in Child Development.
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