Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Play fighting (rough-and-tumble play) in children: developmental and evolutionary perspectives

Peter K. Smith, Jennifer StGeorge

International Journal of Play · 2022

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Summary

Play fighting and chasing in human children – often referred to as rough-and-tumble play, or RTP or R&T – is a common form of play, and one that has the most obvious correspondence to play in many (especially mammalian) non-human species. Unlike object, pretend and sociodramatic play, generally encouraged by teachers and parents, play fighting is viewed in a much more ambivalent way. The role it has in development, and whether this should be viewed in a positive or negative light, continues to be debated. Here we review what insights may be gained from research on play fighting in non-human species, main developmental trends in humans, definitional and measurement issues, cultural variations, and empirical data on the correlates found with behaviors of adaptive significance. We conclude wi

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1080/21594937.2022.2152185
Catalogue ID
BFmoef2oy6-ydujkz
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