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Showing 1 to 15 of 293 results Save | Export
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Rista C. Plate; Callie Jones; Joshua Steinberg; Grace Daley; Natalie Corbett; Rebecca Waller – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Examining emotion recognition and response to music can isolate recognition of and resonance with emotion from the confounding effects of other social cues (e.g., faces). In a within-sample design, participants aged 5-6 years in the eastern region of the United States (N = 135, M[subscript age] = 5.98, SD[subscript age] = 0.54; 78 female, 56 male;…
Descriptors: Music, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response, Young Children
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Cooper, Alexandra M.; Reschke, Peter J.; Porter, Chris L.; Coyne, Sarah M.; Stockdale, Laura A.; Graver, Haley; Siufanua, Matthew; Rogers, Adam; Walle, Eric A. – Developmental Psychology, 2023
Parents play an important role in socializing children's emotion understanding. Previous research shows that parents emphasize different aspects of emotion contexts depending on the discrete emotion. However, there is limited research on how parents and children discuss self-conscious emotions, such as embarrassment, guilt, and shame, and what…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Self Concept, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response
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Vaish, Amrisha; Savell, Shannon – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Gratitude is a positive social emotion that one experiences when one has benefited from another person's goodwill (McCullough, 2002). Feeling gratitude urges the grateful person to reciprocate and respond prosocially, thereby solidifying cooperation. Yet little prior research has focused on the social functions of displaying gratitude, namely to…
Descriptors: Young Children, Interpersonal Relationship, Psychological Patterns, Social Behavior
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Cleroux, Angelina; Peck, Joann; Friedman, Ori – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Although people take care of their own possessions, they also engage in stewardship and take care of things they do not own. Here, we examined what young children infer when they observe stewardship behavior of an object. Through four experiments on predominantly middle-class Canadian children (total N = 350, 168 girls and 182 boys from a…
Descriptors: Young Children, Psychological Patterns, Ownership, Inferences
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Eirunn Skaug; Nikolai O. Czajkowski; Trine Waaktaar; Svenn Torgersen – Developmental Psychology, 2024
The aim of the study was to examine associations between life events and self-assessed loneliness in adolescence. We used data from a Norwegian population-based twin sample including seven birth cohorts (N = 2,879, 56% females). The participants completed self-report questionnaires three times throughout adolescence, with 2 years in between (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Twins, Nature Nurture Controversy, Biological Influences
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Ma, Fengling; An, Rui; Wu, Danxia; Luo, Xianming; Xu, Fen; Lagattuta, Kristin Hansen – Developmental Psychology, 2022
The current study examined the influence of guilt on young children's honesty about their transgression. Children (N = 192; 4-6 years of age; 49.5% male, 50.5% female; middle-income Chinese families) participated in a modified temptation resistance paradigm where they were asked not to peek at a toy in the absence of an experimenter. Next, the…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Young Children, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response
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Kragness, Haley E.; Ullah, Farhat; Chan, Emma; Moses, Rachel; Cirelli, Laura K. – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Around the world, musical engagement frequently involves movement. Most adults easily clap or sway to a wide range of tempos, even without formal musical training. The link between movement and music emerges early--young infants move more rhythmically to music than speech, but do not reliably align their movements to the beat. Laboratory work…
Descriptors: Music Activities, Familiarity, Motion, Dance
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Kaya de Barbaro; Priyanka Khante; Meeka Maier; Sherryl Goodman – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Depression in mothers is consistently associated with reduced caregiving sensitivity and greater infant negative affect expression. The current article examined the real-time behavioral mechanisms underlying these associations using Granger causality time series analyses in a sample of mothers (N = 194; 86.60% White) at elevated risk for…
Descriptors: Mothers, Infants, Depression (Psychology), Play
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Nina Jakhelln Laugen; Silja Berg Kårstad; Trude Reinfjell; Lars Wichstrøm – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Emotion understanding (EU) develops through emotion socialization provided by children's social environments, but the relative importance of various socializing agents has not been determined. In this prospective study, the unique contributions of parents, teachers, and peers to changes in EU from 4 to 8 years of age were therefore investigated in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Children, Preadolescents, Parent Child Relationship
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Doan, Tiffany; Friedman, Ori; Denison, Stephanie – Developmental Psychology, 2021
How we feel about an outcome often depends on how close an alternative outcome was to occurring. In four experiments, we investigated whether predominantly White, middle-class, Canadian children (N = 425, Experiments 1-3) and American adults (N = 227, Experiment 4) consider close counterfactual alternatives when inferring other people's emotions.…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Foreign Countries, Emotional Intelligence, Children
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Heck, Isobel A.; Bregant, Jessica; Kinzler, Katherine D. – Developmental Psychology, 2021
An understanding of harm is central to social and cognitive development, but harm largely has been conceptualized as physical damage or injury. Less research focuses on children's judgments of harm to others' internal well-being (emotional harms). We asked 5- to 10-year-old children (N = 456, 50% girls, 50% boys; primarily tested in Central New…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Well Being, Children, Trauma
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Walle, Eric A.; Dahl, Audun – Developmental Psychology, 2020
The collection of articles presented by Pollak, Camras, and Cole (2019) provides a stimulating survey of the current state of research on emotional development. However, the special issue also makes apparent the need for defining the construct of interest. Definitions of emotions guide how researchers deal with fundamental theoretical and…
Descriptors: Emotional Development, Definitions, Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response
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Caforio, Bruno Costa; Silvestrin, Mateus; Biazoli, Claudinei Eduardo, Jr. – Developmental Psychology, 2020
Here we advance the proposal that in addition to the importance of emotion words, the dynamics of allostatic regulation play a central role in emotion concept development. We argue for a comprehensive extension of constructed emotion theory to emotional development. To do so, we emphasize possible mechanisms for emotion concept differentiation…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Concept Formation, Emotional Development, Human Body
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Chen, Bin-Bin; Qu, Yang; Yang, Beiming; Chen, Xiaochen – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Parental burnout is a state that parents feel exhausted in their parental role. Although past research has examined concurrent correlates of parental burnout, the impacts of parental burnout on adolescent development over time remain largely unknown. The current study explored the indirect mechanisms linking mothers' parental burnout to…
Descriptors: Parents, Burnout, Adolescents, Behavior Problems
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Jambon, Marc; Colasante, Tyler; Malti, Tina – Developmental Psychology, 2021
This study examined the course and correlates of the happy victimizer tendency--the expectation that harming others to achieve a goal will result in positive emotional outcomes for the transgressor--from 4 to 6 years of age in a community sample of Canadian children (N = 150; 50% female; Time 1 M[subscript age] = 4.53 years, SD = 0.30; 33%…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Young Children, Psychological Patterns, Aggression
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