Publication | Closed Access
The Relations of Emotionality and Regulation to Children's Anger-related Reactions
374
Citations
72
References
1994
Year
Constructive Anger ReactionsAffective NeuroscienceEmpathyEducationAnger ReactionsSocial SciencesPsychologyEmotional ResponseDevelopmental PsychologyAnger IntensityEmotional SkillsEmotion RegulationSocial-emotional DevelopmentBehavioral IssueAnger-related ReactionsBehavioural ProblemChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesPsychiatryChild DevelopmentEmotional DevelopmentSelf-regulationEmotionAggression
The purpose of this study was to examine the relations of emotionality (intensity and negative emotion) and regulation (attentional control, mode of coping) to preschoolers' naturally occurring anger reactions. School personnel's ratings of 4-6-year-olds' constructive coping and attentional control were associated with boys' constructive anger reactions whereas their ratings of acting out versus avoidant coping, emotional intensity, and anger intensity generally were correlated with low levels of constructive reactions to anger. Mothers' reports of children's constructive coping and low emotional intensity were associated with children's use of nonabusive language to deal with anger, whereas aggressive coping and negative emotionality were associated with escape behavior when angered. The findings are consistent with the conclusion that individual differences in emotionality and regulatory skills are associated with children's constructive versus nonconstructive anger reactions.
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