Empathy and Observed Anger and Aggression in Five-Year-Olds

In Roberts and Strayer (1996), we reported that emotional expressiveness and anger were important predictors of empathy for school-age children, and that empathy strongly predicted prosocial behaviors aggregated across methods and sources. In this paper, we report how empathy was associated with direct observations of anger and aggression in peer play groups. Twenty-four initially unacquainted five-year-old children (50% girls) were randomly assigned to six same-sex groups; each group met for three one-hour play sessions. Physical and verbal aggression, object struggles and anger were coded from videotapes, as were prosocial and social behaviors. As expected, empathy (aggregated across methods and sources) was negatively associated with aggression and anger, and positively associated with prosocial behaviors. Although children who were more angry were also more aggressive, anger and aggression did not covary across play sessions as a simple causal model requires. These results suggest further directions for research in emotions and aggression.

[1]  M. Hoffman,et al.  Developmental synthesis of affect and cognition and its implications for altruistic motivation. , 1975 .

[2]  M. Hoffman,et al.  Empathy, its development and prosocial implications. , 1977, Nebraska Symposium on Motivation. Nebraska Symposium on Motivation.

[3]  J. Strayer,et al.  Parents' responses to the emotional distress of their children: Relations with children's competence. , 1987 .

[4]  Patrick T. Davies,et al.  Marital conflict and child adjustment: an emotional security hypothesis. , 1994, Psychological bulletin.

[5]  G R Patterson,et al.  A developmental perspective on antisocial behavior. , 1989, The American psychologist.

[6]  C. Saarni The Development of Emotional Competence. The Guilford Series on Social and Emotional Development. , 1999 .

[7]  N. Eisenberg,et al.  Parents' reactions to children's negative emotions: relations to children's social competence and comforting behavior. , 1996, Child development.

[8]  J. Strayer,et al.  Facial and Verbal Measures of Children’s Emotions and Empathy , 1997 .

[9]  J. Block Differential premises arising from differential socialization of the sexes: some conjectures. , 1983, Child development.

[10]  K. Dodge,et al.  Aggression and antisocial behavior. , 1998 .

[11]  N. Miller,et al.  Frustration and aggression , 1939 .

[12]  S. T. Buckland,et al.  An Introduction to the Bootstrap. , 1994 .

[13]  M. Main,et al.  Responses of Abused and Disadvantaged Toddlers to Distress in Agemates: A Study in the Day Care Setting , 1985 .

[14]  J. Strayer,et al.  Children's Anger, Emotional Expressiveness, and Empathy: Relations with Parents’ Empathy, Emotional Expressiveness, and Parenting Practices , 2004 .

[15]  N. Feshbach,et al.  Empathy in Children: Some Theoretical and Empirical Considerations , 1975 .

[16]  Nancy Eisenberg,et al.  Gender and age differences in empathy and sympathy. , 1987 .

[17]  J. Strayer,et al.  Affective and cognitive perspectives on empathy. , 1987 .

[18]  J. Strayer Children's concordant emotions and cognitions in response to observed emotions. , 1993, Child development.

[19]  S. Denham Emotional development in young children , 1998 .

[20]  W. Roberts,et al.  The socialization of emotional expression: Relations with prosocial behaviour and competence in five samples. , 1999 .

[21]  J. Altmann,et al.  Observational study of behavior: sampling methods. , 1974, Behaviour.

[22]  M. Underwood,et al.  A developmental investigation of social aggression among children. , 1997, Developmental psychology.

[23]  J. D. Welsh,et al.  Psychophysiological correlates of empathy and prosocial behaviors in preschool children with behavior problems , 1995, Development and Psychopathology.

[24]  Robert Hughes,et al.  Development of Empathic Understanding in Children , 1981 .

[25]  N. Eisenberg Emotion, regulation, and moral development. , 2000, Annual review of psychology.

[26]  J. Stevenson,et al.  Behavioral deviance and teacher ratings of prosocial behavior: preliminary findings. , 1980, Journal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry.

[27]  D. Pepler,et al.  Observations of aggressive and nonaggressive children on the school playground. , 1998 .

[28]  N. Eisenberg,et al.  Emotional responsivity to others: behavioral correlates and socialization antecedents. , 1992, New directions for child development.

[29]  Brenda K. Bryant,et al.  An Index of Empathy for Children and Adolescents. , 1982 .

[30]  Judith A. Hall,et al.  Gender and emotion , 2008 .

[31]  R. Buck Nonverbal communication of affect in preschool in children: relationships with personality and skin conductance. , 1977, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[32]  J. Strayer,et al.  Empathy in Conduct-Disordered and Comparison Youth. , 1996 .

[33]  E. Ziegel Introduction to the Practice of Statistics (2nd ed.) , 1994 .

[34]  E. Maccoby,et al.  The Psychology of Sex Differences , 1974 .

[35]  J. Strayer,et al.  Empathy, emotional expressiveness, and prosocial behavior , 1996 .

[36]  J. Strayer,et al.  Children's helping strategies: influences of emotion, empathy, and age. , 1989, New directions for child development.

[37]  Ross A. Thompson,et al.  Emotion regulation: a theme in search of definition. , 1994, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development.

[38]  N. Eisenberg,et al.  Sympathy and personal distress: development, gender differences, and interrelations of indexes. , 1989, New directions for child development.

[39]  H. J. Arnold Introduction to the Practice of Statistics , 1990 .