| Literature DB >> 35832838 |
Michael Lewis1, Nicholas J Minar2.
Abstract
Self-recognition emerges during the second year of life and represents the emergence of a reflective self, a metacognition which underlies self-conscious emotions such as embarrassment and shame, perspective taking, and emotional knowledge of others. In a longitudinal study of 171 children, two major questions were explored from an extant database: 1) Do early factors, including IQ, general environmental risk, mother-child attachment interaction, drug exposure, gender, and neonatal risk, relate to self-recognition?; 2) Does self-recognition, along with these earlier factors, predict the child's subsequent emotional knowledge? Consistent with previous data, 39% of children exhibited self-recognition by 18-months and few early factors explored were related to this ability. Moreover, path analysis revealed few effects of the earlier factors predicting self-recognition on children's emotional knowledge. Self-recognition did predict emotional knowledge at 4.5 years, such that children who showed early self-recognition showed greater emotional knowledge. Children from high risk environments also showed lower emotional knowledge. These findings indicate that self-recognition and environmental risk are related to children's later knowledge of emotions.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive Development; Emotion Recognition; Facial Expression; Self-concept; Typical Development
Year: 2021 PMID: 35832838 PMCID: PMC9272979 DOI: 10.1080/17405629.2021.1890578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Dev Psychol ISSN: 1740-5610