Prior work suggests that young children do not generalize others' preferences to new individuals. We hypothesized (following Vaish et al., 2008, Psychol. Bull., 134, 383–403) that this may only hold for positive emotions, which inform the child about the person's attitude towards the object but not about the positivity of the object itself. It may not hold for negative emotions, which additionally inform the child about the negativity of the object itself. Two-year-old children saw one individual (the emoter) emoting positively or negatively towards one and neutrally towards a second novel object. When a second individual then requested an object, children generalized the emoter's negative but not her positive emotion to the second individu...
72 three- to five-year-old preschoolers were exposed to stories in which the character got (or did n...
Previous studies have shown a developmental trend in mixed emotional understanding. As children deve...
Previous studies examined how mood affects children\u27s accuracy in matching emotional expressions ...
There is ample empirical evidence for an asymmetry in the way that adults use positive versus negati...
There is ample empirical evidence for an asymmetry in the way that adults use positive versus negati...
There is ample empirical evidence for an asymmetry in the way that adults use positive versus negati...
Many theory of mind researchers have argued that even preschoolers understand the causal relationshi...
Children interact with peers in their daily lives and sometimes help, share, or otherwise do somethi...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06Adults appreciate that different people can have...
Research examining children’s emotion judgments has generally used nonsocial tasks that do not resem...
The present study, following the approach used by Jenkins and Ball (2000), examined, with reference ...
Data set of Bahn, D., Vesker, M., Garcia Alanis, J. C., Schwarzer, G., & Kauschke, C. (in press). Ag...
The present study investigates whether directing five- to six-year-old children’s attention to hypot...
This experiment addressed the question of whether children\u27\u27s own emotional states influence t...
The present study investigates whether directing five- to six-year-old children’s attention to hypot...
72 three- to five-year-old preschoolers were exposed to stories in which the character got (or did n...
Previous studies have shown a developmental trend in mixed emotional understanding. As children deve...
Previous studies examined how mood affects children\u27s accuracy in matching emotional expressions ...
There is ample empirical evidence for an asymmetry in the way that adults use positive versus negati...
There is ample empirical evidence for an asymmetry in the way that adults use positive versus negati...
There is ample empirical evidence for an asymmetry in the way that adults use positive versus negati...
Many theory of mind researchers have argued that even preschoolers understand the causal relationshi...
Children interact with peers in their daily lives and sometimes help, share, or otherwise do somethi...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06Adults appreciate that different people can have...
Research examining children’s emotion judgments has generally used nonsocial tasks that do not resem...
The present study, following the approach used by Jenkins and Ball (2000), examined, with reference ...
Data set of Bahn, D., Vesker, M., Garcia Alanis, J. C., Schwarzer, G., & Kauschke, C. (in press). Ag...
The present study investigates whether directing five- to six-year-old children’s attention to hypot...
This experiment addressed the question of whether children\u27\u27s own emotional states influence t...
The present study investigates whether directing five- to six-year-old children’s attention to hypot...
72 three- to five-year-old preschoolers were exposed to stories in which the character got (or did n...
Previous studies have shown a developmental trend in mixed emotional understanding. As children deve...
Previous studies examined how mood affects children\u27s accuracy in matching emotional expressions ...