Remembering children's emotions: sources of concordant and discordant accounts between parents and children.

Dev Psychol

Department of Psychology and Social Behavior, University of California, Irvine 92697-7085, USA.

Published: May 1999

Parents were asked to recall recent events that had evoked happiness, sadness, anger, and fear in their children. Children (N = 77, 2.3-6.6 years) indicated whether they remembered each event, and if so, they described the event and how it had made them feel. Agreement between parent and child concerning how the child felt varied as a function of emotion. Children agreed with their parents' emotion attributions most often for events that parents recalled as having evoked happiness and sadness, less often for fear, and least often for anger. Children disagreed with parents' attributions of happiness and sadness most often when parents and children differed concerning the attribution of children's goals. Discordant reports about children's anger were most frequent when parents and children reported conflicting goals. Discordant reports about fear were most frequent when parents and children focused on different parts of the temporal sequence surrounding the event.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037//0012-1649.35.3.790DOI Listing

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