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Journal Article

Citation

Wilson BJ, Petaja HS, Stevens AD, Mitchell MF, Peterson KM. J. Genet. Psychol. 2011; 172(4): 376-400.

Affiliation

Seattle Pacific University, Clinical Psychology Department, 3307 Third Ave West, Suite 107, Seattle, WA 98119-1922, USA. bjwilson@spu.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

22256683

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.


Language: en

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