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Children's Responses to Entry Failure: Attention Deployment Patterns and Self-Regulation Skills
Authors:Beverly J. Wilson  Holly S. Petaja  Arianne D. Stevens  Margaret F. Mitchell  Kari M. Peterson
Affiliation:1. Seattle Pacific University;2. University of Washington;3. Everett Clinic, Everett , Washington;4. The BERC Group , Bothell, Washington
Abstract:In this study the authors investigated associations among children's observed responses to failure in an analogue entry situation, their attention deployment patterns, and skills and processes associated with self-regulation. Participants were 54 kindergarten and first-grade students who were either aggressive-rejected or low aggressive-popular based on peer nominations. Inhibitory control predicted the tendency to respond to entry failure by stopping and watching the group's activity. Baseline vagal tone and other-directed attention predicted children's tendency to change entry strategies after failure. Parent-rated attention skills moderated the relation between children's attention deployment patterns during the entry task and their responses to entry failure. Children who engaged in more other-directed attention were less likely to turn to solitary play after entry failure but only if they had high or moderate levels of attentional control. Other-directed attention was related to repeating previous entry bids without modification after entry failure but only when children had high levels of attention problems.
Keywords:aggressive-rejected children  attention  emotion regulation  entry  self-regulation
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