Emotion regulation in two-year-olds : strategies and emotional expression in four contexts.

Author(s)
Grolnick, W.S. Bridges, L.J. & Connell, J.P.
Year
Abstract

A descriptive study of the modulation of negative emotion in the toddler period was conducted by examining expressions of negative emotion and the strategies used to reduce or change these expressions. 6 strategies were identified and evaluated in terms of their frequency of use in different situations, relations with emotional expressiveness, and cross-situational consistency. 37 2-year-olds were seen in 2 laboratory contexts (delay and separation) each with variants. Emotion regulation strategies and emotional expressiveness were coded from video-tapes of children's behaviour in these 4 situations. Findings suggest that active engagement was most commonly used and most negatively associated with child distress. Use of strategies varied by context, and there was more cross-situational consistency in use of strategies that were more negatively or positively associated with distress within a given context than in use of particular strategies without consideration of their within-context significance. (A)

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Publication

Library number
C 7196 [electronic version only] /01 /
Source

Child Development, Vol. 67 (1996), No. 3 (June), p. 928-941, 43 ref.

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