ISSN 0439-755X
CN 11-1911/B
主办:中国心理学会
   中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理学报 ›› 2026, Vol. 58 ›› Issue (3): 516-533.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1041.2026.0516 cstr: 32110.14.2026.0516

• 研究报告 • 上一篇    下一篇

群体合作规范违反情境中儿童第三方干预偏好的发展及内在动机

朱娜平, 张霞, 周杰, 李燕芳   

  1. 北京师范大学中国基础教育质量监测协同创新中心, 北京 100875
  • 收稿日期:2025-03-31 发布日期:2025-12-26 出版日期:2026-03-25
  • 通讯作者: 李燕芳, E-mail: Liyanfang@bnu.edu.cn
  • 作者简介:朱娜平和张霞同为第一作者。
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金面上项目(32471117)资助

The development and motivations of children’s third-party intervention preference in group cooperation norm violation

ZHU Naping, ZHANG Xia, ZHOU Jie, LI Yanfang   

  1. Collaborative Innovation Center of Assessment for Basic Education Quality, Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, China
  • Received:2025-03-31 Online:2025-12-26 Published:2026-03-25

摘要: 第三方干预是维系群体合作的有效手段。本研究通过两个实验, 考察4~11岁儿童在“不贡献劳动”与“不贡献物质”两种违反合作规范的情境下, 对“搭便车”行为(指个体在不付出成本的情况下享受他人贡献带来的收益)的道德评价、愤怒情绪、干预偏好及内在动机。结果发现: (1)儿童普遍对“搭便车”行为持消极评价, 并表现出愤怒情绪; (2) 4岁起儿童就能够实施干预, 且随年龄增长表现出从奖励合作者逐渐转向惩罚“搭便车者”的干预偏好, 转折年龄分别在6岁左右(不贡献劳动)和8岁左右(不贡献物质); (3)儿童奖励合作者的内在动机表现为道义动机与结果动机并存, 而惩罚“搭便车者”的内在动机则由两种动机并存逐渐发展为在6岁以后以结果动机为主。研究表明, 儿童早期已经能够对合作规范违反行为做出道德判断和第三方干预行为, 干预策略呈现从奖励积极到惩罚消极的跨情境稳定性, 但两种干预方式的内在动机具有特异性。

关键词: 群体合作, 规范违反, 第三方干预, 内在动机

Abstract: Third-party intervention plays a critical role in maintaining large-scale human group cooperation. Previous studies on children’s third-party intervention mainly focused on explicit norm violations, such as unfair distribution or damage to others’ belongings. Different from explicit violations, free-riding in group cooperation, where an individual benefits from others' contributions without incurring the corresponding costs) involves implicit norms and lacks clearly identifiable victims. Recognizing and addressing free riders in group cooperation from a third-party perspective is an important aspect of children’s social norms acquisition and the development of cooperative behavior. This study examined the development and motivations of third-party intervention preference among children aged 4 to 11 years old in scenarios involving group cooperation norms violations.
=In Study 1, 141 children (70 boys, Age range: 4.06~11.96 years, Mage = 8.02, SD = 2.30) heard a cooperation story in which one group member shirked effort by playing football instead of helping clean the classroom but still shared in the reward. Children’s moral evaluation, anger toward free-riding behavior, and their intervention preferences were measured in sequence. In Study 2, 125 children (63 boys, Age range: 4.34~11.68 years, Mage = 8.01, SD = 2.31) completed a similar task involving materials contribution to a collective resource. To test cross-situational stability and rule out majority-influence effects, the group composition was adjusted to two cooperators and two free riders. In this story, a four-member group jointly dropped gold coins into a magic jar to get more gold coins. Among them, two members of the group each dropped one gold coin into the magic jar, while the other two members did not. In the end, the two coins that were dropped into the magic jar turned into four gold coins, and then each member of the group received one gold coin. Similarly to Study 1, children’s moral evaluation, anger feeling on free-riding behavior, intervention preferences and motivations were measured.
Across both studies, children consistently evaluated free-riding negatively and reported anger toward it. As third-parties, children preferred intervention in free-riding behavior over non-intervention across all ages. With age, children’s preferences for third-party intervention showed a cross-situational stable developmental trend, gradually shifting from rewarding cooperators to punishing free riders. Importantly, the shift occurred earlier in effort-based scenarios (ages 5.51~5.67) than in material-based scenarios (ages 8.21~8.22). In terms of the motivations of intervention preferences, Study 2 found that the internal motivations for children to reward cooperators reflect both deontological motivation and consequentialist motivation. In contrast, the motivation to punish free-riders changes with age, gradually shifting toward the consequentialist motivation after age six. These findings indicated that the underlying motivations driving children’s intervention preferences are both specific and age-dependent.
These findings demonstrate that even young children can morally evaluate norm violations in group cooperation and engage in third-party interventions. Their intervention preferences develop in a stable, cross-situational manner, gradually shifting from rewarding prosocial behavior to punishing norm violators. However, the motivations underlying reward and punishment are distinct and age-dependent. This research provides valuable insights into the development of children’s cooperative behavior and their understanding of group cooperation norm.

Key words: group cooperation, norm violation, third-party intervention, internal motivation

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