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Children Expressing Mixed Emotion in a Nonsocial Context

Authors :
Gary Fireman
Olivia H Tousignant
Abigail Stark
Sarah W Hopkins
Art S Fergusson
Source :
The Journal of genetic psychology. 181(5)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Efforts to demonstrate children's ability to report experiencing mixed emotions have typically used an allocentric approach, asking children to report on emotions of other individuals in response to stories or movie clips demonstrating social themes. In contrast, literature examining children's personal experiencing and understanding of their own mixed emotions, typified as an egocentric approach, in nonsocial situations remains underdeveloped. The current study examined the development of children's reported understanding and experience of mixed emotions egocentrically. By examining a nonsocial context, this investigation extends existing gender- and age-related research on expressing egocentric mixed emotion. Using a computerized game with a disappointing wins paradigm, egocentric mixed emotional experience was elicited in 142 children (80 boys, 62 girls) aged 6 to 12 years. Results revealed that age, but not gender, was a statistically significant predictor of expressing egocentric mixed emotion experience and understanding. When studying mixed emotion development in a nonsocial context, gender did not contribute to differences in child reports. A significant positive relationship between egocentric mixed emotion experiencing and understanding also emerged. These findings contribute to our understanding of children's emotion development and offer future directions for examining the broad domain of nonsocial contexts in youth expression of mixed emotions.

Details

ISSN :
19400896
Volume :
181
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of genetic psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bbe7e297b0ab90fc5fd18ff04cd19a60