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How bad is it to eat an intelligent chicken?: Children's judgments of eating animals are less ‘self-serving’ than adults

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How bad is it to eat an intelligent chicken? Children's judgments of eating animals are less ‘self-serving’ than adults. / Kozachenko, H.H.; Piazza, J.
In: Social Development, Vol. 33, No. 1, e12709, 01.02.2024.

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Kozachenko HH, Piazza J. How bad is it to eat an intelligent chicken? Children's judgments of eating animals are less ‘self-serving’ than adults. Social Development. 2024 Feb 1;33(1):e12709. Epub 2023 Sept 14. doi: 10.1111/sode.12709

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@article{f199058d293c417bbd2e78ff24972d21,
title = "How bad is it to eat an intelligent chicken?: Children's judgments of eating animals are less {\textquoteleft}self-serving{\textquoteright} than adults",
abstract = "AbstractResearch shows that adult meat eaters strategically distort or disregard information about animals (e.g., their intelligence) that is problematic for meat consumption. However, the development of such behaviours is not well understood. Two studies tested whether primary‐school‐age children exhibit motivated use of information about food animals as adults do (N = 148 children, 410 adults). Using experimental methods that manipulated participants{\textquoteright} perceptions of the intelligence (high vs. low) of food animals versus non‐food animals (Study 1) and the perspective taken (self vs. other; Study 2), it was found that, compared to adult omnivores, children tend to hold stronger moral views about the wrongness of harming animals to use as food. Only adults exhibited motivated non‐use of intelligence information and self‐other distinctions in their moral‐concern judgments. Children's judgments of eating animals did not exhibit the strategic, self‐serving processes characteristic of adult meat eaters. Psychological explanations for these developmental differences are discussed.",
keywords = "animals, children, food, moral judgments, motivated cognition",
author = "H.H. Kozachenko and J. Piazza",
year = "2024",
month = feb,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/sode.12709",
language = "English",
volume = "33",
journal = "Social Development",
issn = "0961-205X",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - How bad is it to eat an intelligent chicken?

T2 - Children's judgments of eating animals are less ‘self-serving’ than adults

AU - Kozachenko, H.H.

AU - Piazza, J.

PY - 2024/2/1

Y1 - 2024/2/1

N2 - AbstractResearch shows that adult meat eaters strategically distort or disregard information about animals (e.g., their intelligence) that is problematic for meat consumption. However, the development of such behaviours is not well understood. Two studies tested whether primary‐school‐age children exhibit motivated use of information about food animals as adults do (N = 148 children, 410 adults). Using experimental methods that manipulated participants’ perceptions of the intelligence (high vs. low) of food animals versus non‐food animals (Study 1) and the perspective taken (self vs. other; Study 2), it was found that, compared to adult omnivores, children tend to hold stronger moral views about the wrongness of harming animals to use as food. Only adults exhibited motivated non‐use of intelligence information and self‐other distinctions in their moral‐concern judgments. Children's judgments of eating animals did not exhibit the strategic, self‐serving processes characteristic of adult meat eaters. Psychological explanations for these developmental differences are discussed.

AB - AbstractResearch shows that adult meat eaters strategically distort or disregard information about animals (e.g., their intelligence) that is problematic for meat consumption. However, the development of such behaviours is not well understood. Two studies tested whether primary‐school‐age children exhibit motivated use of information about food animals as adults do (N = 148 children, 410 adults). Using experimental methods that manipulated participants’ perceptions of the intelligence (high vs. low) of food animals versus non‐food animals (Study 1) and the perspective taken (self vs. other; Study 2), it was found that, compared to adult omnivores, children tend to hold stronger moral views about the wrongness of harming animals to use as food. Only adults exhibited motivated non‐use of intelligence information and self‐other distinctions in their moral‐concern judgments. Children's judgments of eating animals did not exhibit the strategic, self‐serving processes characteristic of adult meat eaters. Psychological explanations for these developmental differences are discussed.

KW - animals

KW - children

KW - food

KW - moral judgments

KW - motivated cognition

U2 - 10.1111/sode.12709

DO - 10.1111/sode.12709

M3 - Journal article

VL - 33

JO - Social Development

JF - Social Development

SN - 0961-205X

IS - 1

M1 - e12709

ER -