Metacognitive emotion regulation: Children's awareness that changing thoughts and goals can alleviate negative emotions.
Male
4. Education
Emotions
05 social sciences
Age Factors
Psychology, Child
Thinking
Sex Factors
Child, Preschool
Humans
Female
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Child
Goals
Emotional Intelligence
DOI:
10.1037/a0018428
Publication Date:
2010-08-02T20:07:57Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
Metacognitive emotion regulation strategies involve deliberately changing thoughts or goals to alleviate negative emotions. Adults commonly engage in this type of emotion regulation, but little is known about the developmental roots of this ability. Two studies were designed to assess whether 5- and 6-year-old children can generate such strategies and, if so, the types of metacognitive strategies they use. In Study 1, children described how story protagonists could alleviate negative emotions. In Study 2, children recalled times that they personally had felt sad, angry, and scared and described how they had regulated their emotions. In contrast to research suggesting that young children cannot use metacognitive regulation strategies, the majority of children in both studies described such strategies. Children were surprisingly sophisticated in their suggestions for how to cope with negative emotions and tailored their regulatory responses to specific emotional situations.
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