Abstract

A key skill in collaborative problem-solving is to communicate and evaluate reasons for proposals to arrive at the decision benefiting all group members. Although it is well-documented that collaborative contexts facilitate young children’s reasoning, less is known about whether competition with other groups contributes to children’s collaborative reasoning. We investigated whether between-group competition facilitates children’s within-group collaborative reasoning, regarding their production of reasons and their use of transacts, communicative acts that operate on one another’s proposals and reasoning. We presented 5- and 7-year-old peer dyads with two collaborative problem-solving tasks (decorating a zoo and a dollhouse). In one task, children competed against another group (the competitive condition); whereas in the other task, they did not (non-competitive condition). Our results suggest that children’s sensitivity to group competition as reflected in their reasoning changed depending on the task. When they decorated a house, they produced more transacts in the competitive condition than in the non-competitive condition; whereas when they decorated a zoo, this pattern was reversed. Thus, our results highlight that group competition did not influence children’s collaborative reasoning consistently across different contexts.

Highlights

  • A key step in collaborative problem-solving is communicating and evaluating reasons provided by the individuals working together [1,2]

  • This study aimed to elucidate whether outgroup competition can trigger better reasoning among collaborating children, whether it can motivate more actions being discussed and more reasons being brought up for and against the actions under consideration

  • Our results suggest that there is no significant effect of outgroup competition upon the extent of children’s reasoning

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Summary

Introduction

A key step in collaborative problem-solving is communicating and evaluating reasons provided by the individuals working together [1,2]. Humans excel at this kind of reasoning in groups and this ability of sharing reasons to make rational collaborative decisions contributes to humans’ evolutionary success [3]. It confers advantages in dealing with challenges in the physical and social environment, as well as in group competition.

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