Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
918422 Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 2011 27 Pages PDF
Abstract

This investigation analyzed the methods used over the past 35 years to study emotion regulation (ER) in children. Articles published from 1975 through 2010 were identified in 42 child clinical, developmental, and emotion psychology journals. Overall, 61.1% of published ER articles relied on one method and 23.6% used two methods. Analyses revealed (a) 82.8% of published ER research occurring within the past decade; (b) higher rates of observational methods with infant and toddler/preschool samples, but more use of self-report methodology with middle childhood and adolescent samples; (c) a longer history of published ER research with samples of infants to 5-year-olds, including the use of more longitudinal design, compared with older samples; and (d) a positive association between journal impact ratings and the use of physiological and observational measurement. Review of the measurement tools used to capture ER revealed great diversity in how emotion processes are understood and evaluated.

► A review of 157 articles revealed a dramatic increase over 35 years in the scientific inquiry of emotion regulation in youth. ► Designs using one assessment method were most common. ► The use of multi-modal emotion regulation assessment has not changed over time. ► A vast array of emotion regulation assessments have been developed to capture the diversity of systems involved in examining this construct.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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