학술논문

Is There a Downside to Anticipating the Upside? Children's and Adults' Reasoning About How Prior Expectations Shape Future Emotions.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Child Development. Jul/Aug2019, Vol. 90 Issue 4, p1170-1184. 15p. 1 Diagram, 2 Charts, 1 Graph, 1 Map.
Subject
*EMOTIONS
*EXPECTATION (Psychology)
*CHILD psychology
*PSYCHOLOGY of adults
*FUTURE, The
*PESSIMISM
*OPTIMISM
*REASON
*COMPARATIVE studies
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL cooperation
*MOTIVATION (Psychology)
*MULTIVARIATE analysis
*READABILITY (Literary style)
*RESEARCH
*EVALUATION research
Language
ISSN
0009-3920
Abstract
Four- to 10-year-olds and adults (N = 205) responded to vignettes involving three individuals with different expectations (high, low, and no) for a future event. Participants judged characters' pre-outcome emotions, as well as predicted and explained their feelings following three events (positive, attenuated, and negative). Although adults rated high-expectation characters more negatively than low-expectation characters after all outcomes, children shared this intuition starting at 6-7 years for negative outcomes, 8-10 years for attenuated, and never for positive. Comparison to baseline (no expectation) indicated that understanding the costs of high expectations emerges first and remains more robust across age than recognition that low expectations carry benefits. Explanation analyses further clarified this developing awareness about the relation between thoughts and emotions over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]