Publication Cover
Laterality
Asymmetries of Brain, Behaviour, and Cognition
Volume 12, 2007 - Issue 5
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Original Articles

Linking children's neuropsychological processing of emotion with their knowledge of emotion expression regulation

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Pages 381-396 | Received 18 Dec 2006, Published online: 22 Aug 2007
 

Abstract

Understanding of emotions has been shown to develop between the ages of 4 and 10 years; however, individual differences exist in this development. While previous research has typically examined these differences in terms of developmental and/or social factors, little research has considered the possible impact of neuropsychological development on the behavioural understanding of emotions. Emotion processing tends to be lateralised to the right hemisphere of the brain in adults, yet this pattern is not as evident in children until around the age of 10 years. In this study 136 children between 5 and 10 years were given both behavioural and neuropsychological tests of emotion processing. The behavioural task examined expression regulation knowledge (ERK) for prosocial and self-presentational hypothetical interactions. The chimeric faces test was given as a measure of lateralisation for processing positive facial emotion. An interaction between age and lateralisation for emotion processing was predictive of children's ERK for only the self-presentational interactions. The relationships between children's ERK and lateralisation for emotion processing changes across the three age groups, emerging as a positive relationship in the 10-year-olds. The 10-years-olds who were more lateralised to the right hemisphere for emotion processing tended to show greater understanding of the need for regulating negative emotions during interactions that would have a self-presentational motivation. This finding suggests an association between the behavioural and neuropsychological development of emotion processing.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the children and teachers for their participation and support. We would further like to thank Robin Heath and the anonymous reviewer of our paper for their helpful comments in revising the manuscript.

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