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. 2009 Jan-Feb;80(1):115-33.
doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2008.01249.x.

Young children's reasoning about the effects of emotional and physiological states on academic performance

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Young children's reasoning about the effects of emotional and physiological states on academic performance

Jennifer Amsterlaw et al. Child Dev. 2009 Jan-Feb.

Abstract

This study assessed young children's understanding of the effects of emotional and physiological states on cognitive performance. Five, 6-, 7-year-olds, and adults (N= 96) predicted and explained how children experiencing a variety of physiological and emotional states would perform on academic tasks. Scenarios included: (a) negative and positive emotions, (b) negative and positive physiological states, and (c) control conditions. All age groups understood the impairing effects of negative emotions and physiological states. Only 7-year-olds, however, showed adult-like reasoning about the potential enhancing effects of positive internal states and routinely cited cognitive mechanisms to explain how internal states affect performance. These results shed light on theory-of-mind development and also have significance for children's everyday school success.

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