Development Psychology
- Created by: Sam_dearnx
- Created on: 17-01-18 21:06
What are emotions?
- Biologically-endowed processes involved in quickly evaluating an experience and preparing to act on it rapidly.
Cole et al (2004):
- Trigger - an experience (something we see or hear)
- Appraisal - evaluation of experience
- Physiological changes - changes in the body
- Action - do something
Distinct from moods
Identifiable trigger
Quick onset and short duration
Responses to the trigger are psychological, physical and behavioural
Preparedness to act
Appraisal --> Action readiness
Adaptive: a survival mechanism
- Innate
- Universal
- Both automatic and extended deliberate responses
Fear
- Eyebrows: musvle contracts to pull eyebrows up and in
- Eyelids: lower eyelids
- Lips
Six basic emotions
1) Happiness; 2) Surprise; 3) Fear; 4) Sadness; 5) Disgust; 6) Anger
7) Comtempt - added later by Ekman
- Discrete emotion families
Different physiological expression, triggers, appraisals, behavioural respose
- 'Families' of emotions
- Can be blended
Complex emotions
E.g. Pride, embarrassment, jealousy, guilt, shame
What do children need to understand about emotions
- How to identity, label and understand the emotions of oneself and others
- How to talk about and understood talk about emotions
- How to manage and control the experience, intensity ad expression of emotions.
- How to respond to others emotions
- How to manage behaviour associated with emotions
- Emotional competency/emotional intelligence: emotion knowledge, intelligence and communication
Components of emotional intelligence
1) Expressing and recognising emotion
2) Understand emotions
3) Regulating emotions
Developmental changes in emotions
- Relationships between triggers and emotions change in line with cognitive and social changes
- Fear of imaginary creatures
- Peer rejection
- Understanding of intentionality
- There is an increase in negative emotions in early to middle adolescence
- As children get older, there are changes in when and how emotions are displayed.
Emotions in infancy and early childhood
Infants
- Show distinct facial expressions from birth
- Can appear to imitate a range of emotional expressions
- Distinguish different emotions in facial, vocal and body expressions
- Show preference for positive over negative expressions
'Happiness': smiling and laughter
- Social smiles emerge from around 8 weeks - smiles in responses to external events (esp. people)
- Develop through parent-infant mutual imitation
- Cross-cultural differences determine frequency of smiling
Wormann et al, 2012
- Adaptive - results in attention and care
- Laughter is seen from 3-4 months, usually in response to clowning and absurdity
- Children 'clown around' to make others laugh in their second year
- Positive emotional expressions become more frequent over the first year.
Negative emotions: distress, anger, fear
- Undifferentiated distress is the first observable emotions
- Difficult to identity components (anger vs. fear vs. pain)
- Children show wariness by around 4 months, and by 7 months begin to show fear of strangers, new objects and loud noises.
- Adaptive: help children get protection and support
- Separation anxiety - 8 months
Social referencing
Emotional communication e.g. Sorce et al (1985) 'The visual cliff'
- 12 months old:
- Smile: 14-19 cross cliff
- Fear: 0/19 cross cliff
- Anger: 2/19 cross cliff
- Emotional expressions allow children to understand a situation as safe or threatening,
- Other example: parent's affective cues influence infant's affect towards absurb events (Mireault et al, 2015)
- Tickling requires 'social wrapping' to be funny (Reddy, 2008)
Social referencing and emotional co-regulation
1) Infant actively seeks another person's affective appraisal of a stimulus
2) That individual provides a clear affective message about the stimulus
3) The infant regulates his/her affect and behaviour toward the event to align with that message
- Young children use the emotional signals of others in moments of ambiguity and uncertainty to regulate affect and behaviour
Emotions in preschool
- Fear of strangers and separation anxiety intensifies from around 15 months and lasts until about 2.
- Ability to regulate emotions improves - collaboration with parental regulatio and increasing independent regulation
- Learn about 'display rules'
- Increasing recognition, understanding, and expression of basic emotions and developmnt of social emotions.
Social emotions
- Social or 'self-conscious' emotions relate to our sense of self and other's or imagined reactions to us
- E.g. embarrassment, guilt, shame, pride
- Requires an understanding of oneself as distinct from others and ability to engage in self-evaluation
- Used in monitoring social interactions and correct moral and social transgressions
- I did that wrong vs. I did that wrong
- Self --> shame
- Behaviour --> guilt
- Shame: feel exposed, attempt to hide or getaway
- Guilt: remorse and regret, attempts to undo consequences of behaviour
Emotions in late childhood
- Emotions are not expressed as vividly and directly as in younger years
- More sophisticated emotional regulation strategies - increasing use of cognitive techniques
- Emotion recognition improves
- By five years old, children are as good as adults at distinguishing happiness and fear (Redger et al, 2015)
- Accurately identifying anger and sadness takes lonher and continues to improve into later childhppd and adolescence.
Chronaki et al, 2015
- Recognition of facial and vocal emotion expression in 4-7, 10 years olds and adults
- 10 year olds as accurate as adults at indentifying happy and angry faces, but not as good as identifying sadness or using vocal information.
Emotion regulation
- 'Attempts to influence which emotions one has, when one has them, and how one experiences or expresss these emotions
- Changes to intensity, duration, quality
- Activation of a goal to influence emotion trajectory
- Conscious and deliberate or unconscious and implicit
- Emotional regulation can include changes to:
- The situation/trigger
- Subjective feelings
- Cognitions
- Physiological processes
- Behaviour
Emotion regulation
- Over time, children develop an increasing number of strategies to regulate these aspects of the emotional process.
- Regulatory behaviour include:
- Avoidance (i.e. gaze aversion)
- Self-soothing (sucking thumb)
- Talking about emotion/experience
- Negotiation
- 'Rethink' emotional experience
- Adapt to situation rather than trying to change it
- The growing ability to control attention and physical movement; to use language and more developed cognitive skills, all enhance a child's emotion regulation.
Self-regulation
Mischel et al, 1987 - The Marshmellow test
- Children chose between one marshmellow now or two marshmellows later
- Avoidance and distraction were observed in those who delayed the longest
- Those who 'delayed gratification' were much more successful in later life - better academic performance, jobs, physical and psychological well-being
- Mental distancing - the best method for delaying gratification is to change your perception on the object. This mentality 'cools the hots' aspect of your environment.
The importance of emotion regulation
- An inability to control the experience and display of emotion subsequent behaviour impairs peer relationships and academic performance
- E.g. taking part in play, dealing with conflict, coping with stress, attention in class rooms
- Emotion-related issues may be core to a range of developmental and psychological problems, such as conduct disorders, anxiety and depression (Crowell et al, 2015)
Emotion dysregulation
- Suppression of emotions (negative or positive) can be maladaptive
- Some emotion regulation strategies may provide immediate relief but cause long-term vulnerability
- E.g. hypervigilence in contexts of parental conflict; emotional buffers in response to parental depression or anxiety
- Some emotion regulation may be unhelpful
- E.g. Self harm, alcohol, drugs
Parental emotion socialisation
- Children's emotional regulation behaviour emerges from the parent-child relationship and parenting practices
Reactions to emotion displays
- Encourage, discourag, ignore
- Dismissing, teasing, criticising
Discussion of emotions
- Rationalising and explaning vs. dismiising, teasing and criticising
- Reference to mental states.
Parental emotion socialisation
Emotional expression
- Display and intensity of emotions
- Eisenbrg et al, 1998
- Early emotional socialisatio is driven by family but peers become increasingly influential in middle childhood. (Klimes-Dougan & Zeman, 2007)
Emotion regulation in interaction
E.g. whining
- A way of producing a request, complaint or objection using distinct vocal delivery to display and 'affective stance'.
- Recruits the help of a parent to fix a problem
- Parents can engage in 'stance inversion' - e.g. respond to negative affect with positive affect
- Focus on problem resolution rather than emotion state.
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