1971
DOI: 10.1176/ajp.127.11.1491
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The Development of the Language of Emotions

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Cited by 16 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Evidence from Buckalew and Bell (1985) provides some support for this, their findings indicated that children more often draw a happy compared to a sad face. Furthermore, children's experiences of anger and sadness were explored through a series of studies by Lewis, Wolman and King (1971, 1972a, 1972b which showed that for sadness children tended to increase their avoidance responses with age, conversely for anger children actually increased their coping strategies and decreased their avoidance responses. Although this research did not refer directly to drawing, we might hypothesize that this behavior could be reflected in children's drawings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Evidence from Buckalew and Bell (1985) provides some support for this, their findings indicated that children more often draw a happy compared to a sad face. Furthermore, children's experiences of anger and sadness were explored through a series of studies by Lewis, Wolman and King (1971, 1972a, 1972b which showed that for sadness children tended to increase their avoidance responses with age, conversely for anger children actually increased their coping strategies and decreased their avoidance responses. Although this research did not refer directly to drawing, we might hypothesize that this behavior could be reflected in children's drawings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Borke (1971Borke ( , 1973 found that children up to age 8 had difficulty matching sadness and anger to the appropriate emotionally charged situations, although children as young as age 3 had no difficulty identifying "happy-making" situations. Lewis, Wolman, and King (1971, 1972a, 1972b were concerned with how children said they would deal with certain emotions presented hypothetically when given a choice between coping, mastery, flight, or avoidance as resolution styles. For the emotion of anger, there was a tendency for children to increase their coping or mastery responses with age and decrease their avoidance responses.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Throughout human development anger is a response to being hurt (Anderson, 1978;Gordon, 1974;Lewis, Wolman, & King, 1971;Schlehofer, 1978;Tyrrell, Hanock, & Johns, 1977). With the growth of new cognitive and affective capacities at each stage of development, however, the child is able to perceive additional causes of anger and exercise a larger repertoire of responses.…”
Section: The Development Of Angermentioning
confidence: 99%