The Free Press Journal

Infants can distinguis­h leaders from bullies

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Infants, by the age of 2, have the potential to distinguis­h between the power asserted by a leader and a bully, finds a study, shedding light on how babies make sense of the world. The study found that 21-month-old infants can distinguis­h between respect-based power asserted by a leader and fearbased power wielded by a bully.

“Our results provide evidence that infants in the second year of life can already distinguis­h between leaders and bullies,” said Renee Baillargeo­n, Professor at the University of Illinois. “Infants understand that with leaders, you have to obey them even when they are not around; with bullies, though, you have to obey them only when they are around,” she added.

For the study, reported in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, Baillargeo­n developed a series of animations depicting cartoon characters interactin­g with an individual portrayed as a leader, a bully or a likeable person with no evident power. She measured infants’ eye-gazing behaviour as they watched the same animations.

“In one experiment, the infants watched a scenario in which a character, portrayed either as a leader or a bully, gave an order to three protagonis­ts, who initially obeyed,” Baillargeo­n said. The infants detected a violation when the protagonis­ts disobeyed the leader, but not when they disobeyed the bully, Baillargeo­n found.

In another experiment, the team tested whether the infants were responding to the likeabilit­y of the characters in the scenarios, rather than to their status as leaders or bullies.

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