The Role of Controllability and Foreseeability in Children's Counterfactual Emotions.

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Tác giả: Shalini Gautam, Alicia K Jones, Jonathan Redshaw

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 363.232 Patrol and surveillance

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : Child development , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 58038

 Counterfactual emotions such as regret may aid future decision-making by encouraging people to focus on controllable features of personal past events. However, it remains unclear when children begin to preferentially focus on controllable features of such events. Across two studies, Australian 4-9-year-olds (N = 336, 168 females
  data collected during 2021-2022) completed tasks that led to positive or negative personal outcomes, and then reported their emotions toward different aspects of these tasks. In both studies, younger children unexpectedly reported stronger sadness toward uncontrollable or unforeseeable aspects of negative events, and only by 8-9 years did many children report stronger sadness toward controllable or foreseeable aspects. The tendency to focus on more functional counterfactuals may therefore emerge relatively late in development.
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