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Individual differences in children's emotion understanding have been intensively investigated during the past decade. These studies suggest that individual differences emerge quite early, are present among both preschool and school-aged children, are not restricted to the understanding of some specific components of emotions, correlate with other characteristics of the individual and his or her social network, and may persist even after an intervention program. Few studies have looked at this area of development over several years.
"[T]he two aims of the present study were to examine both change and stability in individual differences among school-aged children in their understanding of several components of emotion. For this purpose, 42 children aged 7, 9, and 11 years at Time I were retested 13 months later at Time II on several components of emotion understanding, both simple and complex, with the Test of Emotion Comprehension (TEC). The results show that:
Pons, F., and Harris, P. (2005, December). "Longitudinal change and longitudinal stability of individual differences in children's emotion understanding." Cognition & Emotion, Vol. 19, 8, 1158-1174.
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