Developmental Differences in Children and Adults' Enforcement of Explore Versus Exploit Search Strategies in the United States and Turkey
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Date
2024
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
OpenAIRE Downloads
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Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Across development, as children acquire a deeper understanding of their environment, they explore less and take advantage, or "exploit," what they already know. Here, we test whether children also enforce exploration-oriented search behaviors onto others. Specifically, we ask whether children are more likely to encourage a search agent to explore versus exploit their environment, and whether this pattern varies across childhood (between 3 and 6 years). We also ask whether this pattern differs between children and adults, and generalizes across two different sociocultural contexts-Turkey and the United States-that differ on dimensions that might relate to children's decisions about exploration (e.g., curiosity-focused educational practices, attitudes toward uncertainty avoidance). Participants (N = 358) watched an agent search for rewards and were asked at various points whether the agent should "stay" (exploit) in their current location, or "go" (explore) to a new location. At all points in the experiment, children enforced exploration significantly more often than adults. Early in the agent's search, children in the US enforced exploration more often than children in Turkey; later in the search, younger children (from both sociocultural contexts) were more likely to continue enforcing exploration compared to older children. These findings highlight that children are not only highly exploratory themselves, but also enforce exploration onto others-underscoring the central role that exploration plays in driving early cognitive development across diverse sociocultural contexts.Research Highlights The current study examined developmental and cross-cultural differences in children and adults' enforcement of explore-exploit search strategies. Children in the US and Turkey enforced exploration more than adults, who enforced exploitation more often; results were generally consistent across cultures with small differences. Mirroring developmental changes in children's own search behavior; the tendency to enforce exploration decreased between 3- to 6-years of age. Findings underscore the central role of an "exploration mindset" in children's early decision-making-even when exploration has no direct benefits to the child themselves.
Description
Keywords
Cross-cultural, Exploration, Decision making, Cognitive development, Explore-exploit trade-offs, Adult, Male, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Turkey, United States, Young Adult, Child Development, Child, Preschool, Exploratory Behavior, Humans, Female, Child
Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL
Fields of Science
05 social sciences, 03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine, 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Citation
WoS Q
Q1
Scopus Q
Q1

OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A
Source
Developmental Science
Volume
27
Issue
Start Page
End Page
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Scopus : 1
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Mendeley Readers : 2
SCOPUS™ Citations
1
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Web of Science™ Citations
1
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Page Views
334
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Downloads
1
checked on Feb 03, 2026
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