Emotional Regulation and Emotional Development

被引:358
作者
Thompson, Ross A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nebraska, Dept Psychol, Lincoln, NE 68588 USA
关键词
emotion; self-regulation; development;
D O I
10.1007/BF01319934
中图分类号
G44 [教育心理学];
学科分类号
0402 ; 040202 ;
摘要
Current neofunctionalist views of emotion underscore the biologically adaptive and psychologically constructive contributions of emotion to organized behavior, but little is known of the development of the emotional regulatory processes by which this is fostered. Emotional regulation refers to the extrinsic and intrinsic processes responsible for monitoring, evaluating, and modifying emotional reactions. This review provides a developmental outline of emotional regulation and its relation to emotional development throughout the life-span. The biological foundations of emotional self-regulation and individual differences in regulatory tendencies are summarized. Extrinsic influences on the early regulation of a child's emotion and their long-term significance are then discussed, including a parent's direct intervention strategies, selective reinforcement and modeling processes, affective induction, and the caregiver's ecological control of opportunity for heightened emotion and its management. Intrinsic contributors to the growth of emotional self-regulatory capacities include the emergence of language and cognitive skills, the child's growing emotional and self-understanding (and cognized strategies of emotional self-control), and the emergence of a "theory of personal emotion" in adolescence.
引用
收藏
页码:269 / 307
页数:39
相关论文
共 191 条
[71]   CHILDRENS USE OF PERSONALITY ATTRIBUTIONS TO PREDICT OTHER PEOPLES EMOTIONAL AND BEHAVIORAL REACTIONS [J].
GNEPP, J ;
CHILAMKURTI, C .
CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1988, 59 (03) :743-754
[72]   THE DEVELOPMENT OF PERSONALIZED INFERENCES - UNDERSTANDING OTHER PEOPLES EMOTIONAL-REACTIONS IN LIGHT OF THEIR PRIOR EXPERIENCES [J].
GNEPP, J ;
GOULD, ME .
CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1985, 56 (06) :1455-1464
[73]   ROUND-TABLE - WHAT IS TEMPERAMENT 4 APPROACHES [J].
GOLDSMITH, HH ;
BUSS, AH ;
PLOMIN, R ;
ROTHBART, MK ;
THOMAS, A ;
CHESS, S ;
HINDE, RA ;
MCCALL, RB .
CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1987, 58 (02) :505-529
[74]  
Gottman J., 1986, CONVERSIONS FRIENDS, P192
[75]   FROM AN ATTRIBUTIONAL THEORY OF EMOTION TO DEVELOPMENTAL-PSYCHOLOGY - A ROUND-TRIP TICKET [J].
GRAHAM, S ;
WEINER, B .
SOCIAL COGNITION, 1986, 4 (02) :152-179
[76]   A Review of Attribution Theory in Achievement Contexts [J].
Graham, Sandra .
EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW, 1991, 3 (01) :5-39
[77]   FALSE BELIEFS ABOUT EMOTION - CHILDRENS UNDERSTANDING OF MISLEADING EMOTIONAL DISPLAYS [J].
GROSS, D ;
HARRIS, PL .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL DEVELOPMENT, 1988, 11 (04) :475-488
[78]  
Gunnar M., 1989, COPING UNCERTAINTY B, P101
[79]  
Gunnar M. R., 1991, EMERGENCE DISCIPLINE, P119
[80]   ATTACHMENT, TEMPERAMENT, AND ADRENOCORTICAL ACTIVITY IN INFANCY - A STUDY OF PSYCHOENDOCRINE REGULATION [J].
GUNNAR, MR ;
MANGELSDORF, S ;
LARSON, M ;
HERTSGAARD, L .
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1989, 25 (03) :355-363