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Contributions to individual differences in preschoolers' identification of basic emotional expressions and situations, emotion language, and their self-generated causes for basic emotions (happy, sad, angry, and afraid) were investigated across parts of 2 preschool years (N = 47; initial M age = 41 months). An aggregate of preschool emotion understanding was predicted by the intrapersonal predictors, child age and overall cognitive-language ability. Observed socialization, including explanations about emotions, and positive and negative responsiveness to child emotions predicted the aggregate of emotion understanding, even with age and cognitive-language ability partialed. The contribution of socialization predictors to emotion understanding was moderated by sex only for negative emotional responsiveness, and children with the lowest emotion understanding scores had mothers who showed more anger. Emotions function as vital regulators of children's intra- and interpersonal behavior (Barrett Bretherton, Fritz, Zahn-Waxier, Campos they also become able to verbalize coherently and fluently about the causes of their own and others' emotions (e.g., happiness, sadness, and anger; see Bretherton et al., 1986; Denham, 1986; Denham Dunn, Bretherton, Fabes, Eisenberg, McCormick,
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Susanne A. Denham
George Mason University
Daniel Zöller
Koblenz University of Applied Sciences
Elizabeth A. Couchoud
George Mason University
Developmental Psychology
George Mason University
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Denham et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a209a2b5049d8f68e91cca8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1037/0012-1649.30.6.928