Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/10839

Title: Social competence and emotional comprehension: How are they related in children?
Authors: Roazzi, A.
Rocha, A.
Candeias, A. A.
Silva, A.
Minervino, C.
Roazzi, M.
Pons, F.
Editors: Roazzi, A.
Souza, B. C.
Bilsky, W.
Keywords: Social competence
Emotion comprehension
Test of Emotion Comprehension
Socially in Action-Peers
Similarity Structure Analysis
Issue Date: 2013
Citation: Roazzi, A.; Rocha, A.; Candeias, A.; Silva, A.; Minervino, C.; Roazzi, M & Pons, F., (2013). Social competence and emotional comprehension: How are they related in children?. In A. Roazzi, B. C. de Souza, & W. Bilsky (Eds.), Searching for structure in complex social, cultural and psychological phenomena, (pp. 262-282). Recife, PE: FTA.
Abstract: The developmental progression of emotional competence in childhood provides a robust evidence for its relation to social competence and important adjustment outcomes. This study aimed to analyze how this association is established in middle childhood. For this purpose, we tested 182 Portuguese children aged between 8 and 11 years, of 3rd and 4th grades, in public schools. Firstly, for assessing social competence we used an instrument directed for children using critical social situations within the relationships with peers in the school context - Socially in Action-Peers (SAp) (Rocha, Candeias & Lopes da Silva, 2012); children were assessed by three sources: themselves, their peers and their teacher. Secondly, we assessed children’s emotion understanding, individually, with the Test of Emotion Comprehension (Pons & Harris, 2002; Pons, Harris & Rosnay, 2004). Relations between social competence levels (in a composite score and using self, peers and teachers’ scores) and emotion comprehension components (comprehension of the recognition of emotions, based on facial expressions; external emotional causes; contribute of desire to emotion; emotions based on belief; memory influence under emotional state evaluation; possibility of emotion regulation; possibility of hiding an emotional state; having mixed emotions; contribution of morality to emotion experience) were investigated by means of two SSA (Similarity Structure Analysis) - a Multidimensional Scaling procedure and the external variable as points technique. In the first structural analysis (SSA) we will consider self, peers and teachers’ scores on Social Competence as content variables and TEC as external variable; in the second SSA we will consider TEC components as content variables and Social Competence in their different levels as external variable. The implications of these MDS procedures in order to better understand how social competence and emotion comprehension are related in children is discussed, as well as the repercussions of these findings for social competence and emotion understanding assessment and intervention in childhood is examined.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/10839
Type: article
Appears in Collections:CIEP - Artigos em Livros de Actas/Proceedings
PSI - Artigos em Livros de Actas/Proceedings

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