
Being Asked to Help Dampens Kids’ Prosocial Drive Across Cultures
A cross-cultural study of 686 children aged 6–11 across Germany, the United States, Japan, India, and Ecuador found that children rate the protagonist’s desire to help or share lower when a request to act prosocially is present versus when the action is chosen spontaneously; the effect was observed in Germany, the U.S., Japan, and India but not in Ecuador, suggesting cultural variation in how obligations affect prosocial motivation and highlighting the role of internalized prosocial norms. The study notes limitations, including single-item measures and socioeconomic factors, and calls for further research to disentangle culture from urbanization and SES.