Can self-persuasion reduce hostile attribution bias in young children?

Publication date

2019-12-04

Authors

Dijk, Anouk vanISNI 0000000436381992
Thomaes, SanderISNI 0000000392922741
Poorthuis, AstridORCID 0000-0002-6541-5288ISNI 0000000387496354
Orobio De Castro, BramISNI 0000000043471532

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

Two experiments tested an intervention approach to reduce young children’s hostile attribution bias and aggression: self-persuasion. Children with high levels of hostile attribution bias recorded a video-message advocating to peers why story characters who caused a negative outcome may have had nonhostile intentions (self-persuasion condition), or they simply described the stories (control condition). Before and after the manipulation, hostile attribution bias was assessed using vignettes of ambiguous provocations. Study 1 (n = 83, age 4–8) showed that self-persuasion reduced children’s hostile attribution bias. Study 2 (n = 121, age 6–9) replicated this finding, and further showed that self-persuasion was equally effective at reducing hostile attribution bias as was persuasion by others (i.e., listening to an experimenter advocating for nonhostile intentions). Effects on aggressive behavior, however, were small and only significant for one out of four effects tested. This research provides the first evidence that self-persuasion may be an effective approach to reduce hostile attribution bias in young children.

Keywords

Hostile attribution bias, Self-persuasion, Aggression, Intervention, Experiments

Citation

van Dijk, A, Thomaes, S C E, Poorthuis, A M G & Orobio De Castro, B 2019, 'Can self-persuasion reduce hostile attribution bias in young children?', Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, vol. 47, no. 6, pp. 989-1000. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10802-018-0499-2