Publication | Closed Access
Patterns of Attachment and Maternal Discourse Effects on Children's Emotion Understanding From 3 to 5 Years of Age
149
Citations
31
References
2002
Year
Secure AttachmentLanguage DevelopmentEducationPsychologySocial SciencesEmotional ResponseDevelopmental PsychologySocioemotional DevelopmentChild LanguageCognitive DevelopmentSocial-emotional DevelopmentEarly Childhood ExperienceChild PsychologyCognitive ScienceEarly Childhood DevelopmentMaternal DiscourseAttachment TheoryMaternal Discourse EffectsChild DevelopmentCaregiver StudiesEmotional DevelopmentAbstract TwoEmotion
Abstract Two studies examined the influence of maternal discourse style and security of attachment, and their interaction, on preschoolers’ emotion understanding. The first, with 3‐year‐olds, unexpectedly found no significant prediction of emotion understanding from attachment and discourse, and the interaction of the predictors yielded theoretically unpredicted associations with emotion understanding. Consequently, measures of attachment and emotion understanding were obtained again on these children at age 5 in a second study. At this age, consistent with expectations, secure attachment predicted higher emotion understanding, especially in the context of maternal use of elaborative discourse from the earlier assessment. The findings suggest that during the period of significant representational advance between ages 3 and 5, the influence of maternal discourse and attachment security are developmentally transformed as children's conceptions of psychological states rapidly change. By age 5, however, maternal elaborative discourse in the context of attachment security fosters deeper emotion understanding in preschoolers.
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