Continuity in Emotion Knowledge from Preschool to Middle-Childhood and Relation to Emotion Socialization

被引:0
|
作者
Pamela W. Garner
机构
[1] University of Houston-Clear Lake,
来源
Motivation and Emotion | 1999年 / 23卷
关键词
Longitudinal Study; Social Psychology; Facial Expression; Middle School; School Child;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This longitudinal study examined the preschool correlates of middle school children's knowledge of emotional display rules. Participants included 50 children (29 girls) who were seen at preschoolage and again 4 years later. A total of 91% of the children were Caucasian, 4.5% were Mexican American, and 4.5% were Asian American. During the preschool period, measures included children's knowledge of facial expressions, knowledge of emotion-eliciting situations, and emotional role-taking ability. In addition, the rate at which their mothers explained the causes of emotions was assessed. Four years later, the children's knowledge of emotional display rules was assessed. The display rule measures included expression regulation knowledge (i.e., whether the children altered the facial expression relative to the internal feeling without providing a motive), self-protective display rules, and prosocial display rules. Results revealed that preschoolers' situation knowledge was a negative predictor of expression regulation knowledge and that emotional role-taking was inversely related to knowledge of self-protective display rules. The results also demonstrated that the rate at which mothers' explained emotions to their children as preschoolers was positively associated with expression regulation knowledge and knowledge of prosocial display rules.
引用
收藏
页码:247 / 266
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Parenting and children's prosocial and problem behaviors in middle childhood: The role of Turkish mothers' emotion socialization practices
    Acar-Bayraktar, Ayse Vildan
    Cakmak, Zeynep
    Saritas-Atalar, Dilek
    SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, 2019, 28 (02) : 333 - 346
  • [42] Introduction to the special issue of social development: Emotion socialization in childhood and adolescence
    Klimes-Dougan, Bonnie
    SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, 2007, 16 (02) : 203 - 209
  • [43] Tuning in to Kids: improving emotion socialization practices in parents of preschool children - findings from a community trial
    Havighurst, Sophie S.
    Wilson, Katherine R.
    Harley, Ann E.
    Prior, Margot R.
    Kehoe, Christiane
    JOURNAL OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY, 2010, 51 (12) : 1342 - 1350
  • [44] Emotion situation knowledge in American and Chinese preschool children and adults
    Wang, Q
    COGNITION & EMOTION, 2003, 17 (05) : 725 - 746
  • [45] RELATION OF EARLY SOCIALIZATION EXPERIENCES TOAGGRESSION IN MIDDLE CHILDHOOD
    SEARS, RR
    JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1961, 63 (03): : 466 - +
  • [46] Pathways from Childhood Maltreatment to Unsupportive Emotion Socialization: Implications for Children’s Emotional Inhibition
    Sarah Cabecinha-Alati
    Rachel Langevin
    Audrey Kern
    Tina Montreuil
    Journal of Family Violence, 2021, 36 : 1033 - 1043
  • [47] Pathways from Childhood Maltreatment to Unsupportive Emotion Socialization: Implications for Children's Emotional Inhibition
    Cabecinha-Alati, Sarah
    Langevin, Rachel
    Kern, Audrey
    Montreuil, Tina
    JOURNAL OF FAMILY VIOLENCE, 2021, 36 (08) : 1033 - 1043
  • [48] Mothers' interoceptive knowledge predicts children's emotion regulation and social skills in middle childhood
    MacCormack, Jennifer K.
    Castro, Vanessa L.
    Halberstadt, Amy G.
    Rogers, Megan L.
    SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, 2020, 29 (02) : 578 - 599
  • [49] Preschool Teachers' Emotion Socialization and Child Social-Emotional Behavior in Two Countries
    Denham, Susanne A.
    Mortari, Luigina
    Silva, Roberta
    EARLY EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT, 2022, 33 (05): : 806 - 831
  • [50] Knowledge of emotion-regulation strategies in preschool children from German and immigrant families
    Gust, Nicole
    Petermann, Franz
    Koglin, Ute
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR KINDER-UND JUGENDPSYCHIATRIE UND PSYCHOTHERAPIE, 2014, 42 (05): : 315 - 323