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Showing 1 to 15 of 90 results Save | Export
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Alicia K. Jones; Shalini Gautam; Jonathan Redshaw – Child Development, 2025
Counterfactual emotions such as regret may aid future decision-making by encouraging people to focus on controllable features of personal past events. However, it remains unclear when children begin to preferentially focus on controllable features of such events. Across two studies, Australian 4-9-year-olds (N = 336, 168 females; data collected…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Psychological Patterns, Decision Making, Emotional Response
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Hoewook Chung; Eunhyeung Han – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2025
This study aims to identify the theoretical premises and key variables affect to develop children's emotional intelligence (EI). To this end, the Preferred Studies for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) was used for the meta-analysis. The final data set consisted of 73 cases which affect to develop children's EI from 24 studies, and the…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Literature Reviews, Meta Analysis, Emotional Intelligence
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Peter J. Reschke; Eric A. Walle; Brooklyn Daines Coleman; J. Michael Jex; Ashley M. Fraser; Chris L. Porter; Mindy A. Brown; Brandon N. Clifford; Amberly King; L. Caroline McMurray; Ethan T. Strang – Child Development, 2025
This study examined the development of emotion understanding. Children (N = 296, 157 boys, 139 girls) and parents (67% White, 8% Black, 15% Hispanic, 2% Asian American, 6% Biracial, 2% "Other") recruited from Denver, Colorado were observed annually for four years starting in 2019 (beginning M[subscript age] = 2.44 years, SD = 0.26)…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Interpersonal Communication, Reading Aloud to Others, Story Telling
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Davies, Patrick T.; Thompson, Morgan J.; Martin, Meredith J.; Cummings, E. Mark – Child Development, 2021
This study examined whether childhood interparental conflict moderated the mediational pathway involving adolescent exposure to interparental conflict, their negative emotional reactivity to family conflict, and their psychological problems in a sample of 235 children (M[subscript age] = 6 years). Significant moderated-mediation findings indicated…
Descriptors: Family Environment, Conflict, Parent Influence, Child Development
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Osgood, Jayne; de Rijke, Victoria – Global Studies of Childhood, 2022
Often used in the plural, "tantrum" denotes an uncontrolled outburst of anger and frustration, typically in a young child. In this paper we attempt to enact a feminist project of reclamation and reconfiguration of 'the toddler tantrum'. Drawing on a range of theoretical traditions, this paper investigates the complex yet generative…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Behavior Problems, Emotional Response, Psychological Patterns
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Ying Li; Talia Q. Halleck; Laura Evans; Paras Bhagwat Bassuk; Leiana Paz; Ö. Ece Demir-Lira – Developmental Science, 2024
In this study, we aimed to determine the role of parental praise and child affect in the neural processes underlying parent-child interactions, utilizing functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) hyperscanning. We characterized the dynamic changes in interpersonal neural synchrony (INS) between parents and children (4-6 years old, n = 40…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Psychological Patterns, Affective Behavior, Child Behavior
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Barrett, Karen Caplovitz – Developmental Psychology, 2020
In this commentary on the special issue on emotional development, I focus on the papers by Holodynski and Seeger (2019) and by Hoemann, Xu, and Barrett (2019). I suggest that although understanding our emotions is an important part of emotional development; emotional development cannot be reduced to concept development, even when such concepts…
Descriptors: Emotional Development, Emotional Response, Interdisciplinary Approach, Teamwork
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Melike Acar; Ozce Sivis; Vincent H. Sienkiewicz – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2024
This study examined children's emotion attributions and moral judgements to hypothetical procedural justice outcomes when the candidates were equal in merit but different in need. Children (7 to 11 years old, N = 88) were presented with four vignettes depicting resource-rich and resource-poor candidates losing educational materials and…
Descriptors: Social Class, Social Differences, Child Development, Cognitive Development
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White, John – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2021
This paper is about the place that love of the activities they engage in has in a student's school education. After examining what it is to love an activity, the discussion turns to its place in school education as it might be. Given the role of human flourishing in the school's overall aims, the paper looks first at how this is related to love.…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Learning Activities, Student Interests, Student Motivation
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Caitlin T. Hines; Samantha Steimle; Rebecca Ryan – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Food insecurity poses a serious threat to children's development, but the mechanisms through which food insecurity undermines child development are far less clear. Specifically, food insecurity may influence children through its effect on parents' psychological well-being and parent--child interactions as a result, but past research on the role of…
Descriptors: Food, Hunger, Child Development, Parent Child Relationship
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Gambin, Malgorzata; Wozniak-Prus, Malgorzata; Konecka, Alicja; Sharp, Carla – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2021
Emotion regulation abilities play a crucial role in child and adolescent development. Thus, there is a need to investigate correlates and predictors of the emotion regulation abilities in adolescents. Previous studies have shown that attachment security plays an important role in the development of adaptive emotion regulation strategies; however,…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response, Child Development, Adolescent Development
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Iordanou, Christiana; Mattock, Karen – Education 3-13, 2022
Maurice Sendak's picture book Where the "Wild Things Are" was investigated as a means of emotion recognition in preschool children. Sixty-six children and 60 adults participated in two tasks. The first was a book task, requiring identification of emotions in three target pictures, in three conditions. The visual condition presented the…
Descriptors: Picture Books, Emotional Response, Preschool Children, Adults
Wright, Travis – Teachers College Press, 2023
Learn how to navigate the challenging terrain of connecting with a child who is deeply afraid, angry, and/or sad. Framing this work as emotionally responsive teaching (ERT), this book expands current conceptualizations of trauma-informed practice to encompass more broadly the relational demands of supporting young children with challenging life…
Descriptors: Trauma Informed Approach, Teaching Methods, Emotional Response, Psychological Patterns
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Fukkink, Ruben G. – Infant and Child Development, 2022
Infants attend daycare at an early age, which raises questions about children's sensitivity to the childcare environment and the role of different temperamental traits in their development in the early years. In a two-year longitudinal study with parent- and caregiver-reported data for Dutch children at the age of 1 and 2 years (120 children from…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Infants, Child Care, Personality
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Carrick, Nathalie; Richmond, Rebecca – Early Child Development and Care, 2021
This study examined parent-child storytelling for insights into children's fantastical thinking. We targeted differences in storytelling based on story genre (fictional-reality and fictional-fantasy) emotion, and storyteller, and how dyads treated fantasy within the stories. 49 3- to 5-year-olds and their parents told stories based on images that…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Fantasy, Parent Child Relationship, Child Development
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