2022
DOI: 10.1002/icd.2378
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Who gets mad, sad, scared or happy at discipline? Emotion attributions explain child externalizing behaviour

Abstract: Few studies have linked parental discipline with children's emotional experiences, and not much data explore children's emotional attributions to discipline linked to externalizing behaviour. With a sample from Brazil, this study examines which emotions children most aptly attribute to a protagonist facing spanking, time-out or inductive discipline for norm violations. We hypothesized that anger, sadness, and fear would have higher attribution rates at spanking or time-out, relative to inductive discipline and… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
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“…There are a few limitations of the presented study that should be considered. First, the EMT test was primarily designed for younger children (Morgan et al, 2010; but it has been also used in older children and adolescents; Belmonte‐Darraz et al, 2021; Brown et al, 2021; de Oliveira et al, 2023). Results from the current study suggest that EMT task was relatively easy for children aged 6–9 years.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are a few limitations of the presented study that should be considered. First, the EMT test was primarily designed for younger children (Morgan et al, 2010; but it has been also used in older children and adolescents; Belmonte‐Darraz et al, 2021; Brown et al, 2021; de Oliveira et al, 2023). Results from the current study suggest that EMT task was relatively easy for children aged 6–9 years.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%