Choosing the One Who Sees You: Emotional Responsiveness as a Cue in Children's Help-Seeking

选择那个能看见你的人:情绪反应作为儿童寻求帮助的线索

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Abstract

Prior research has explored children's help-seeking tendencies in relation to the characteristics of help providers with a primary focus on the helper's competencies. In the current study, we propose that acknowledging a child's emotions without judgment, referred to as emotional validation, is another cue that guides children's help-seeking behavior. In Study 1, we surveyed mothers of children aged 3-6 years (N = 200) and found that their tendency to validate their children's emotions was positively associated with the children's help-seeking behavior, particularly among older children (5-6 years). In Study 2, a randomized experiment with children aged 3-6 years (N = 68) tested the causal effect of emotional validation on help-seeking behaviors. When presented with a challenging task, older children (5-6 years) were more likely to seek help from an emotion-validating adult than an emotion-invalidating adult. This pattern was not observed in younger children (3-4 years). These findings underscore the fact that by around the age of 5, children begin to integrate emotional validation into their social evaluations, using it as a critical cue in deciding whom to approach for help. This developmental shift highlights the role of emotional validation in fostering supportive relationships and promoting adaptive help-seeking behaviors. SUMMARY: Preschoolers are selective when choosing whom to seek help from. Children prefer to seek help from an emotionally validating responder. This preference was particularly evident among older preschoolers (ages 5-6), but not among younger ones (ages 3-4).

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