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Imaginary Friends They're Keeping Lots
of Children Company Imagination
is alive and thriving in the minds of America's school-age children.
It
is so prevalent that 65 percent of children report that, by the age of 7, they
have had an imaginary companion at some point in their lives, according to a study
by University of Washington and University of Oregon psychologists. They
also found that having an imaginary companion is at least as common among school-age
children as it is among preschoolers. Thirty-one percent of the school-age youngsters
enjoyed playing with an imaginary companion compared with twenty eight percent
of preschoolers. "This
finding is fascinating in that it goes against so many theories of middle childhood,
such as those proposed by Sigmund Freud and Jean Piaget. Having an imaginary companion
is normal for school-age children," said Stephanie Carlson, a UW assistant
psychology professor. Marjorie
Taylor, a psychology professor at the University of Oregon, and Carlson are the
lead authors of the study published in the Journal Developmental Psychology.

Imaginary companions come in a fantastic
variety
of guises, including
invisible boys
and girls,
a squirrel, a panther, a dog,
and
a seven-inch-tall elephant.
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Having
an imaginary companion appears to be an ongoing and changing process because a
child doesn't necessarily play with the same imaginary companion throughout childhood.
Carlson said some children reported having multiple and serial imaginary companions.
The number of imaginary companions described by children ranged from one to 13
different entities. "It
is somewhat of a revolving door. Children are nimble in coming up with these imaginary
companions and sometimes we have a hard time keeping up with all of the ones a
child has," she said. The
researchers originally recruited 152 preschoolers, ages 3 and 4, and their parents
several years ago. Each child and parents were interviewed separately about imaginary
companions. The researchers also collected data on the children's verbal ability
and gave them a series of standardized tasks to assess development, or what psychologists
call theory of mind. Three years later, 100 of those children (50 girls and 50
boys) and their parents volunteered for the newly published study. The children
and their parents again were interviewed separately about imaginary companions.
Parents also filled out a questionnaire about their child's personality and the
children took a series of standardized tasks that measured social understanding.
Children were
considered to have imaginary companions if they said they had one and provided
a description of it. If the companion was a doll or stuffed animal, children also
had to include psychological details (such as "She is nice to me") for
it to be considered an imaginary friend. Imaginary
companions described by the children came in a fantastic variety of guises, including
invisible boys and girls, a squirrel, a panther, a dog, a seven-inch-tall elephant
and a "100-year-old" GI Joe doll. While 52 percent of the imaginary
companions that preschoolers played with were based on props such as special toys,
67 percent of those created by school-age children were invisible, according to
Carlson. The
study also showed that: - While
preschool girls were more likely to have an imaginary companion, by age 7 boys
were just as likely as girls to have one.
- 27
percent of the children described an imaginary friend that their parents did not
know about.
- 57
percent of the imaginary companions of school-age youngsters were humans and 41
percent were animals.
- One
companion was a human capable of transforming herself into any animal the child
wanted.
- Not
all imaginary companions are friendly. A number were quite uncontrollable and
some were a nuisance.
The
researchers also were curious to know why children stop playing with imaginary
friends. "Imaginary
companions are treated by children much in the same way as when they lose interest
in toys or other activities," said Carlson. "In many cases they simply
go away, or children don't remember. Other times children replace an old imaginary
companion with a new one, or they go on to friendships with real kids to meet
some of the same needs." The
researchers also looked at childhood impersonation pretending to be an
imaginary character and found it to be almost universal. Virtually all
preschoolers pretended to be an animal or another person and 95 percent of the
school-age children engaged in impersonation. The
researchers did not look at impersonation in the same detail as they did imaginary
companions, and were surprised that so many school-age children continued to engage
in the activity. One tantalizing finding was that school-age children who did
little or no impersonation scored low on emotional understanding of other people,
according to Carlson. She
said that fantasy -- interacting with imaginary friends and impersonation -- plays
a role in child development, both cognitively and emotionally. This kind of activity
allows children to manage social situations in a safe context, such as practicing
how to handle conflict with something that may or may not talk back to them. Cognitively
it helps them deal with abstract symbols and thought, which leads them to abstract
thought about their own identity. "Imaginary
companions have had a bad rap from psychologists for a long time, and there was
the perception that parents were getting the message that having an imaginary
companion wasn't healthy," she said. "But this study shows that nearly
two-thirds of children have them and the striking fact is that children of all
personality styles have imaginary companions." Source...The
University of Oregon funded the research. Co-authors of the study are former University
of Oregon students Bayta Maring, Lynn Gerow and Carolyn Charley. http://www.uwnews.org/article.asp?articleID=6814
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