Skip to main content
Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience logoLink to Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
. 2010 Nov 25;2:109. doi: 10.3389/fnevo.2010.00109

Emotion Word Comprehension from 4 to 16 Years Old: A Developmental Survey

Simon Baron-Cohen 1,*, Ofer Golan 1, Sally Wheelwright 1, Yael Granader 1, Jacqueline Hill 1
PMCID: PMC2996255  PMID: 21151378

Abstract

Background: Whilst previous studies have examined comprehension of the emotional lexicon at different ages in typically developing children, no survey has been conducted looking at this across different ages from childhood to adolescence. Purpose: To report how the emotion lexicon grows with age. Method: Comprehension of 336 emotion words was tested in n = 377 children and adolescents, aged 4–16 years old, divided into 6 age-bands. Parents or teachers of children under 12, or adolescents themselves, were asked to indicate which words they knew the meaning of. Results: Between 4 and 11 years old, the size of the emotional lexicon doubled every 2 years, but between 12 and 16 years old, developmental rate of growth of the emotional lexicon leveled off. This survey also allows emotion words to be ordered in terms of difficulty. Conclusions: Studies using emotion terms in English need to be developmentally sensitive, since during childhood there is considerable change. The absence of change after adolescence may be an artifact of the words included in this study. This normative developmental data-set for emotion vocabulary comprehension may be useful when testing for delays in this ability, as might arise for environmental or neurodevelopmental reasons.

Keywords: emotions, autism, development


The standard view is that there are only a small number of basic emotions that are recognized cross-culturally: happy, sad, angry, afraid, surprised, and disgusted. All other emotions – often labeled “complex emotions” – are either treated as being blends of the basic 6 or as being culture specific (Ekman and Friesen, 1969; Prinz, 2004). When it comes to developmental understanding of emotional and mental state terms, whereas the development of basic emotion understanding has been extensively studied, only a small number of complex emotions (e.g., jealous, proud, disappointed, embarrassed) have been studied developmentally (Harris, 1989; Herba and Phillips, 2004). The study reported here aims to examine a much broader range of emotions and mental states in terms of when children and adolescents understand the words for each of these.

Children's abilities to label emotional expressions start developing from as early as 2 years of age (Izard and Harris, 1995; Denham, 1998). Bretherton and Beeghly interviewed mothers of 28 month old children about their vocabulary, and found that over 60% of the children were familiar with the emotional terms happy, scared, and mad (i.e., angry), and were able to use them in their language. Sad was known to more than 50% of the children at this age, but more than 80% of them knew and used emotion words such as like and love (Bretherton and Beeghly, 1982). Another study reported that more than 75% of 3 year olds use emotion words for feeling good, happy, sad, angry, loving, mean, and surprised (Ridgeway et al., 1985). Toddlers are more likely to first use emotion labels to refer to their own emotional state (at about 20–24 months). Later, such labels are used with reference to others’ emotions, and by 3–3.5 years of age, children will use emotion terms for imaginary characters or in reference to those in a story (Reilly et al., 1990).

Whereas the early development of emotion and mental state vocabulary is well documented, studies describing complex emotions corpora (Ortony et al., 1987; Storm and Storm, 1987; Johnson-Laird and Oatley, 1989) have not tested the development of emotion vocabulary in older children or adults. One study tested the development of complex (and basic) emotion labels in toddlers and pre-schoolers aged 18–71 months, using a list of 125 emotions (Ridgeway et al., 1985). However, this was not extended into primary school aged children and adolescents. The aim of the study reported here was to collect normative data from children and adolescents aged 4–16 years old, in order to survey which emotion and mental state terms are acquired earlier than others, and how the emotional lexicon grows with age. We used a large corpus of 366 emotion or mental state words.

Samples

Data was collected from 6 age groups (4–6, 7–8, 9–10, 11–12, 13–14, and 15–16), corresponding with UK school year bands (Years 1–2, 3–4, 5–6, 7–8, and 9–10, respectively). Confirmation of age bands was checked using the Annual Schools Census for the academic year 2004/5, provided by the Schools Statistical Unit at the Department for Education and Skills, UK. Participants were all attending mainstream education in the Cambridgeshire area (UK), and included a mix of both state and private schools, in order to attempt to achieve a representative sample of the community. The total sample was therefore n = 377, and they comprised an equal number of males and females. There were n = 30 age 4–6 years old, n = 34 age 7–8 years old, n = 26 age 9–10 years old, n = 87 age 11–12 years old, n = 134 age 13–14 years old, n = 66 age 15–16 years old.

Method

A search for all “emotion” terms in the English language was conducted, using the electronic thesaurus in Microsoft Word.

Word selection

Inclusion criteria

  1. A word was considered to be an emotion term if it described a mental state with an emotional dimension, that could be preceded by the phrase I feel x, or he/she looks x, or he/she sounds x. This definition was used because this study was linked to the development of an encyclopedia of emotion video or audio clips of emotions, portrayed by actors. The collection of these recordings is available on a separate piece of software called Mind Reading (Baron-Cohen, Golan, Wheelwright, and Hill, 20041; Baron-Cohen et al., 2003).

  2. Mental states that were epistemic but which nevertheless had an unambiguous emotional dimension were included (e.g., doubting).

Exclusion criteria

  1. Mental states that could be a purely bodily state (e.g., thirsty) with no necessary mentalistic dimension were excluded, since this was a study of emotion terms.

  2. Slang words (e.g., chuffed) were excluded, in order to only collect normative data that could be useful to a broad range of English-speaking cultures.

  3. Swear words (e.g., pissed off) were excluded, again because these vary considerably from one sub-culture or sub-dialect to another.

  4. Words which the authors judged to be too difficult for all six age-groups were also excluded (e.g., schadenfreude, a word borrowed from German but which appears in the English language and which depicts the emotion of pleasure that one feels at someone else's misfortune).

  5. Epistemic states with no emotional dimension (e.g., reasoning) were excluded, since this was a study of emotion terms rather than all mental state terms.

Population survey

Every emotion term was listed in a vocabulary checklist. Groups of volunteers from the general population (see “Participants” above) were asked if they knew the meaning of each word. The volunteers ranged from age 4 to 16 years old and were stratified by age. For individuals aged 12–16, self-report was accepted. For individuals age 4–11 years old, parent- or teacher-report was collected. This questionnaire survey method invited the participant to choose one of three response options for each word: Clearly Understood, Not Understood, and Possibly Understood. This method (parent- or teacher-report) was used in the development of the Communication Development Inventory (Fenson et al., 1994) and has been found to be reliably correlated with comprehension tested in the lab. Only those items endorsed as Clearly Understood were judged to be within the comprehension of an individual. Finally, words where data was not available from all six age groups were not included in the results, since this was a developmental study1.

Results

n = 336 emotion words met all inclusion and exclusion criteria, and these are listed in Table 1. We analyzed the percentage of words understood by 75% or more of each group. Seventy-five percent was selected because the Binomial test indicated that the probability of achieving this level by chance was p < 0.001. Of the list of 336 emotion words, 41 words were understood by at least 75% of 4–6 year olds, 88 by 7–8 year olds, 180 by 9–10 year olds, 299 by 11–12 year olds, 320 by 13–14 year olds, and 330 by 15–16 year olds. Thus, between 4 and 8 years old, the number of emotion terms understood doubles. Between 9 and 12 years old, this number doubles again. However, between 13 and 16 years old, emotion vocabulary size hardly changes at all, suggesting the earlier dramatic changes in emotional vocabulary comprehension reach a plateau by early adolescence.

Table 1.

Percentage of children in each age band who understood each emotion word.

Emotion word Age (years)
4–6 (%) 7–8 (%) 9–10 (%) 11–12 (%) 13–14 (%) 15–16 (%)
1. Absorbed 0.0 10.5 50.0 78.0 91.8 90.9
2. Accepting 25.0 63.2 66.7 96.6 98.5 97.0
3. Accusing 6.3 31.6 61.1 93.2 97.8 93.8
4. Adoring 18.8 36.8 77.8 94.9 97.8 90.9
5. Affectionate 12.5 15.8 44.4 76.3 94.7 89.4
6. Afraid 75.0 94.7 100 100 100 98.5
7. Aggressive 6.3 52.6 66.7 93.2 98.5 97.0
8. Agony 6.3 63.2 66.7 89.8 95.5 87.9
9. Agreeable 31.3 50.0 83.3 84.7 95.5 92.4
10. Alarmed 18.8 33.3 58.8 91.5 96.3 90.9
11. Alert 0.0 10.5 52.9 96.6 98.5 95.5
12. Amazed 37.5 89.5 77.8 98.3 100 95.5
13. Amused 12.5 42.1 72.2 100 94.0 95.5
14. Angry 87.5 94.7 88.9 98.3 98.5 95.5
15. Annoyed 62.5 89.5 100 98.3 99.3 95.5
16. Anticipating 0.0 10.5 38.9 69.5 85.0 83.3
17. Anxious 6.3 36.8 72.2 81.4 96.3 89.2
18. Apologetic 12.5 42.1 61.1 86.4 92.5 90.9
19. Appalled 0.0 10.5 61.1 88.1 91.8 90.9
20. Appreciated 25.0 52.6 61.1 89.8 92.5 86.4
21. Approving 12.5 15.8 38.9 89.8 97.0 97.0
22. Argumentative 25.0 68.4 72.2 93.2 97.0 89.4
23. Ashamed 31.3 31.6 83.3 94.9 97.8 93.9
24. Assessing 0.0 5.3 5.6 67.8 86.6 78.8
25. Assured 0.0 15.8 38.9 84.7 89.6 87.9
26. Astonished 18.8 36.8 61.1 91.5 97.0 89.4
27. Astounded 0.0 10.5 41.2 79.7 86.6 83.3
28. Attacked 56.3 78.9 88.9 100 99.3 92.3
29. Attracted 6.3 42.1 76.5 96.6 97.8 92.4
30. Aware 18.8 36.8 61.1 98.3 99.3 95.5
31. Bad-tempered 37.5 89.5 83.3 100 100 93.9
32. Baffled 0.0 0.0 33.3 74.6 87.3 89.2
33. Bashful 0.0 10.5 33.3 75.9 83.6 86.4
34. Battered 31.3 42.1 58.8 94.8 95.5 93.9
35. Begging 18.8 57.9 100 100 99.3 97.0
36. Betrayed 0.0 10.5 47.1 94.9 97.0 96.9
37. Bewildered 6.3 10.5 35.3 72.9 88.8 80.3
38. Bitter 12.5 15.8 58.8 91.5 96.3 92.4
39. Bliss 0.0 0.0 17.6 78.0 91.8 89.4
40. Boastful 6.3 31.6 55.6 98.3 96.3 95.5
41. Bold 18.8 26.3 66.7 94.9 97.0 98.5
42. Bored 81.3 94.4 100 100 99.3 100
43. Bothered 50.0 73.7 83.3 93.2 99.3 95.5
44. Brave 68.8 89.5 100 100 100 98.5
45. Broken 75.0 78.9 77.8 93.2 99.3 98.5
46. Brokenhearted 25.0 63.2 100 94.9 97.8 97.0
47. Calculating 18.8 21.1 33.3 84.7 91.8 95.5
48. Calm 50.0 73.7 88.9 98.3 99.3 97.0
49. Carefree 0.0 10.5 50.0 83.1 94.8 97.0
50. Caring 68.8 84.2 88.9 100 98.5 93.9
51. Cautious 0.0 21.1 61.1 91.4 97.8 95.5
52. Certain 25.0 57.9 88.9 100 98.5 97.0
53. Challenging 12.5 47.4 66.7 93.2 97.8 97.0
54. Charitable 0.0 10.5 47.1 74.6 91.8 90.9
55. Charmed 0.0 31.6 47.1 89.8 98.5 93.9
56. Cheated 56.3 78.9 83.3 96.6 98.5 97.0
57. Cheered 43.8 73.7 88.9 98.3 97.8 98.5
58. Cheerful 62.5 89.5 94.4 100 99.3 98.5
59. Choosing 81.3 84.2 77.8 94.9 96.3 97.0
60. Close 62.5 89.5 94.4 94.9 99.3 95.5
61. Clueless 6.3 42.1 76.5 94.9 98.5 97.0
62. Cocky 0.0 5.3 41.2 84.7 92.5 95.5
63. Cold 62.5 57.9 72.2 96.6 99.3 95.5
64. Comfortable 81.3 89.5 83.3 98.3 99.3 93.9
65. Comforting 18.8 52.6 61.1 98.3 97.8 92.4
66. Commiserating 0.0 0.0 5.6 37.3 57.5 63.6
67. Compassionate 0.0 5.3 44.4 67.8 81.3 83.3
68. Complacent 0.0 0.0 5.6 30.5 46.3 69.7
69. Complaining 50.0 78.9 94.4 100 98.5 97.0
70. Conceited 0.0 5.3 6.3 33.9 56.7 71.2
71. Concentrating 56.3 78.9 100 100 95.5 95.5
72. Condescending 0.0 0.0 0.0 55.2 49.6 60.6
73. Confrontational 0.0 0.0 16.7 52.5 72.4 84.6
74. Confronted 0.0 0.0 27.8 86.4 91.8 97.0
75. Confused 43.8 78.9 94.4 100 99.3 98.5
76. Considerate 12.5 22.2 50.0 89.8 97.8 98.5
77. Contempt 0.0 0.0 16.7 64.4 78.4 89.4
78. Content 12.5 22.2 44.4 93.2 95.5 93.9
79. Contrary 0.0 5.6 35.3 74.6 79.9 83.3
80. Controlled 6.3 38.9 66.7 94.9 98.5 97.0
81. Convinced 0.0 22.2 66.7 96.6 96.3 95.5
82. Cooperative 6.3 26.3 77.8 93.2 99.3 97.0
83. Courageous 6.3 11.1 66.7 91.5 92.5 92.3
84. Cowardly 12.5 22.2 77.8 93.2 97.0 97.0
85. Crafty 18.8 22.2 66.7 98.3 99.3 98.4
86. Cranky 6.3 16.7 38.9 76.3 89.6 95.3
87. Craving 0.0 5.6 27.8 78.0 94.8 98.4
88. Critical 6.3 5.6 33.3 86.4 96.3 98.4
89. Cross 81.3 94.4 100 98.3 100 96.9
90. Cruel 62.5 94.4 100 100 100 98.4
91. Crushed 43.8 50.0 77.8 94.9 100 96.9
92. Cunning 6.3 16.7 44.4 98.3 99.3 96.9
93. Curious 18.8 38.9 70.6 100 100 98.4
94. Daring 25.0 72.2 83.3 98.3 98.5 95.3
95. Daydreaming 62.5 77.8 94.4 98.3 100 98.4
96. Dazed 12.5 16.7 44.4 82.8 98.5 96.9
97. Deciding 43.8 77.8 77.8 87.5 97.0 95.3
98. Defeated 12.5 44.4 77.8 94.9 100 96.9
99. Defensive 0.0 22.2 33.3 75.0 99.2 96.9
100. Definite 18.8 55.6 77.8 83.1 89.5 90.6
101. Delighted 37.5 77.8 94.4 81.4 100 95.3
102. Demanding 12.5 61.1 72.2 81.8 98.5 93.8
103. Depressed 18.8 38.9 72.2 76.0 99.2 95.3
104. Desire 6.3 10.5 44.4 82.4 98.5 93.8
105. Despair 12.5 5.3 47.1 91.2 93.2 93.8
106. Desperate 50.0 52.6 83.3 79.5 100 96.9
107. Detached 18.8 26.3 38.9 83.3 98.5 93.7
108. Determined 12.5 52.6 72.2 86.2 97.0 98.4
109. Detesting 6.3 0.0 33.3 80.4 93.2 96.9
110. Devious 0.0 5.3 29.4 69.4 89.5 93.8
111. Devoted 0.0 0.0 33.3 78.8 97.0 96.9
112. Dictating 0.0 5.3 11.1 78.9 88.7 87.5
113. Difficult 68.8 94.7 94.4 98.3 100 98.4
114. Dignified 6.3 0.0 38.9 72.9 85.0 96.8
115. Disagreeable 12.5 63.2 83.3 93.3 99.2 96.9
116. Disappointed 56.3 78.9 88.9 89.4 100 98.4
117. Disapproval 6.3 21.1 55.6 93.1 95.5 96.8
118. Disbelief 12.5 47.4 77.8 98.2 97.7 95.2
119. Disbelieving 12.5 52.6 88.9 91.4 97.7 96.8
120. Discomfort 0.0 57.9 50.0 96.7 97.7 95.2
121. Discontented 0.0 10.5 44.4 84.5 86.5 93.5
122. Discouraged 0.0 10.5 38.9 96.4 95.5 98.4
123. Discouraging 0.0 5.3 38.9 88.1 94.0 98.4
124. Disgrace 6.3 26.3 55.6 95.2 97.0 98.4
125. Disgust 43.8 52.6 72.2 98.3 97.0 98.4
126. Disheartened 0.0 5.3 27.8 73.0 85.7 96.8
127. Disinterested 6.3 57.9 66.7 79.7 85.0 96.8
128. Dislike 43.8 84.2 94.4 80.8 100 98.4
129. Dismayed 0.0 5.3 38.9 77.6 85.7 90.5
130. Dispirited 0.0 0.0 44.4 84.0 82.0 92.1
131. Displeased 6.3 63.2 83.3 86.4 98.5 98.4
132. Disregard 0.0 0.0 27.8 71.2 78.2 93.8
133. Disrespectful 0.0 52.6 72.2 94.6 97.0 95.3
134. Dissatisfied 6.3 42.1 55.6 77.8 93.2 95.3
135. Distant 6.3 47.4 55.6 88.5 98.5 95.3
136. Distaste 0.0 11.1 27.8 80.4 90.2 90.5
137. Distracted 31.3 57.9 77.8 91.5 96.2 98.4
138. Distress 6.3 10.5 50.0 93.3 97.0 98.4
139. Distrust 12.5 36.8 66.7 77.0 95.5 95.2
140. Disturbed 37.5 52.6 55.6 98.3 97.0 96.8
141. Dominated 0.0 5.3 27.8 76.7 88.0 95.3
142. Doubtful 6.3 36.8 55.6 92.1 99.2 96.9
143. Dread 6.3 26.3 66.7 94.9 98.5 95.3
144. Dreamy 50.0 52.6 88.9 87.9 99.2 96.9
145. Eager 6.3 26.3 77.8 76.6 88.4 93.8
146. Easy-going 12.5 26.3 55.6 84.5 93.0 93.8
147. Embarrassed 50.0 89.5 88.9 76.9 100 95.2
148. Encouraged 18.8 42.1 66.7 82.8 86.0 96.9
149. Encouraging 18.8 36.8 66.7 76.7 90.7 96.9
150. Enjoyment 56.3 73.7 94.4 90.2 97.7 96.9
151. Enthusiastic 6.3 31.6 38.9 83.3 92.7 98.4
152. Excited 75.0 100 94.4 82.0 97.7 96.8
153. Fascinated 12.5 52.6 72.2 85.2 90.7 96.9
154. Favor 31.3 57.9 83.3 90.9 95.3 95.3
155. Fear 50.0 94.7 88.9 91.4 100 95.3
156. Fed up 81.3 94.7 100 94.6 100 96.9
157. Fierce 68.8 78.9 77.8 88.1 97.6 96.9
158. Fine 62.5 73.7 94.4 94.7 100 98.4
159. Fired up 0.0 26.3 44.4 81.1 85.7 98.4
160. Flattered 6.3 5.3 38.9 83.9 97.6 100
161. Focused 6.3 31.6 61.1 71.6 100 98.4
162. Fond 12.5 52.6 88.9 82.8 85.4 98.4
163. Foolish 6.3 63.2 66.7 89.8 97.6 100
164. Forbidding 0.0 15.8 33.3 77.8 88.1 98.4
165. Forceful 12.5 27.8 55.6 90.7 95.2 98.4
166. Forgiving 31.3 89.5 100 86.2 100 100
167. Friendly 87.5 100 100 76.1 100 98.4
168. Frightened 87.5 100 100 81.5 100 96.7
169. Frustrated 6.3 52.6 55.6 89.5 88.1 96.7
170. Furious 25.0 78.9 88.9 85.2 97.6 95.1
171. Generous 26.7 27.3 84.0 82.3 100 96.7
172. Gentle 90.0 87.9 96.2 94.4 100 96.7
173. Giving 80.0 87.9 92.3 92.9 100 98.4
174. Glad 86.7 90.9 100 95.7 100 96.7
175. Gloomy 33.3 24.2 76.9 91.3 95.2 98.4
176. Glum 23.3 18.2 61.5 70.0 85.7 96.7
177. Grateful 41.4 72.7 96.2 91.8 100 96.7
178. Grave 13.3 15.2 53.8 75.4 93.0 98.4
179. Grief 3.3 9.1 50.0 65.5 90.7 100
180. Grouchy 20.0 21.2 50.0 82.9 81.4 96.7
181. Grumpy 86.7 93.9 96.2 97.2 100 100
182. Guilty 23.3 60.6 96.2 91.5 100 100
183. Happy 96.7 100 96.2 98.6 100 98.4
184. Harsh 6.7 6.1 65.4 81.7 97.7 96.7
185. Hassled 6.7 42.4 72.0 85.7 95.3 96.7
186. Hate 93.3 100 96.2 98.6 100 100
187. Heartache 13.3 24.2 46.2 73.2 97.7 100
188. Heartbroken 20.0 54.5 65.4 95.8 100 98.4
189. Heated 20.0 30.3 73.1 74.6 95.3 100
190. Helpful 90.0 97.0 100 100 100 96.8
191. Helpless 13.3 45.5 80.8 97.1 97.7 93.5
192. Hollow 0.0 9.1 38.5 76.1 83.7 95.2
193. Homesick 30.0 33.3 76.9 95.8 100 95.2
194. Hopeful 30.0 57.6 88.5 97.2 100 98.4
195. Hopeless 23.3 48.5 88.5 90.1 97.7 100
196. Horrified 36.7 51.5 92.3 91.5 100 100
197. Humiliated 3.3 9.1 50.0 82.6 88.4 96.8
198. Humored 0.0 9.1 23.1 72.5 90.7 100
199. Hurried 46.7 69.7 92.3 91.5 97.7 98.4
200. Hurt 80.0 97.0 96.2 93.0 100 98.4
201. Ignored 66.7 81.8 96.2 94.4 97.6 96.7
202. Impatient 43.3 60.6 100 90.1 92.9 95.2
203. Impressed 46.7 69.7 88.5 91.5 95.2 96.8
204. Injured 60.0 87.9 96.2 88.7 97.6 98.4
205. Innocent 23.3 33.3 76.9 88.6 90.5 96.8
206. Inspired 0.0 6.1 57.7 79.7 85.4 96.8
207. Insulted 6.9 21.2 69.2 87.3 90.5 96.8
208. Insulting 6.7 12.1 73.1 87.3 95.2 98.4
209. Interested 73.3 87.9 100 91.5 92.9 98.4
210. Involved 26.7 63.6 96.2 88.7 93.0 98.4
211. Irritated 23.3 60.6 92.3 81.7 86.0 96.8
212. Jealous 46.7 75.8 80.8 92.9 96.6 100
213. Joking 96.7 93.9 96.2 95.8 98.9 100
214. Jolly 60.0 75.8 96.2 97.2 93.1 100
215. Joy 60.0 78.8 92.3 97.1 96.5 100
216. Judging 10.0 30.3 69.2 77.5 72.4 100
217. Jumpy 20.0 39.4 64.0 88.7 88.5 100
218. Keen 36.7 69.7 96.2 93.0 93.1 100
219. Kind 96.7 97.0 100 97.2 97.7 100
220. Knowing 40.0 57.6 88.5 90.1 96.6 100
221. Liked 73.3 90.9 100 94.4 100 100
222. Listening 83.3 97.0 100 95.8 100 100
223. Lively 30.0 63.6 100 93.0 89.7 100
224. Lonely 83.3 90.9 96.2 95.7 96.6 100
225. Longing 6.9 23.5 50.0 79.7 70.1 95.0
226. Lost 83.3 91.2 92.3 94.3 100 100
227. Love 96.7 100 96.2 98.6 98.9 100
228. Lovesick 13.8 17.6 50.0 81.4 80.2 85.0
229. Low 23.3 64.7 76.9 87.1 87.4 100
230. Loyal 3.4 14.7 69.2 78.6 82.8 95.0
231. Lying 90.0 94.1 100 98.6 97.7 100
232. Mean 73.3 88.2 100 95.7 97.7 100
233. Merry 41.4 50.0 88.5 91.3 94.3 100
234. Mischievous 34.5 35.3 80.8 82.6 73.6 81.0
235. Miserable 70.0 91.2 92.3 91.2 85.1 100
236. Misjudged 3.3 8.8 65.4 75.4 77.0 81.0
237. Mistreated 10.3 38.2 80.8 82.4 82.8 90.5
238. Misunderstood 16.7 47.1 84.6 83.8 87.4 95.2
239. Mocking 3.3 0.0 28.0 64.7 62.1 76.2
240. Modest 0.0 0.0 20.0 64.7 72.4 81.0
241. Moody 63.3 85.3 88.5 97.1 96.6 100
242. Moved 13.8 32.4 61.5 83.8 95.4 95.2
243. Murderous 10.0 23.5 50.0 75.8 72.4 71.4
244. Mystified 0.0 0.0 38.5 68.7 63.2 71.4
245. Nasty 89.7 100 96.2 98.5 97.7 100
246. Needed 46.7 76.5 92.3 92.6 96.6 100
247. Needy 3.4 26.5 46.2 73.5 85.1 95.0
248. Neglected 3.3 5.9 64.0 69.6 72.4 100
249. Nervous 50.0 79.4 96.2 94.2 93.1 100
250. Nosy 56.7 91.2 96.2 97.1 95.4 95.2
251. Numb 3.3 32.4 65.4 84.1 86.2 85.7
252. Obsessed 0.0 11.8 57.7 81.2 89.7 100
253. Offended 6.7 11.8 53.8 85.5 86.2 95.2
254. Outgoing 13.3 14.7 53.8 77.6 82.8 90.5
255. Outraged 3.3 11.8 52.0 83.8 79.3 100
256. Overcome 3.3 11.8 50.0 76.8 83.9 90.5
257. Overjoyed 16.7 47.1 80.8 95.7 86.2 95.2
258. Overpowered 0.0 8.8 50.0 72.5 78.2 90.5
259. Overpowering 0.0 8.8 48.0 72.5 77.0 85.7
260. Overwhelmed 0.0 5.9 48.0 75.4 71.3 90.5
261. Panic 50.0 85.3 92.3 87.5 92.3 100
262. Peaceful 63.3 88.2 92.3 90.5 92.3 95.2
263. Pity 16.7 32.4 88.5 76.6 78.5 95.0
264. Playful 73.3 79.4 88.5 93.8 95.4 100
265. Pleased 96.7 97.1 100 90.5 98.5 100
266. Pleasure 46.7 58.8 88.5 85.7 93.8 100
267. Protective 16.7 47.1 100 85.9 83.1 95.2
268. Proud 53.3 82.4 96.2 90.6 92.3 100
269. Puzzled 33.3 61.8 92.3 87.5 90.8 100
270. Questioning 26.7 52.9 84.6 82.8 84.6 90.5
271. Regret 3.3 26.5 69.2 85.9 81.3 95.2
272. Rejected 3.3 21.2 73.1 84.1 90.6 100
273. Relaxed 63.3 82.4 92.3 85.9 92.2 100
274. Relief 6.7 38.2 80.8 82.5 93.8 95.2
275. Respect 10.0 38.2 88.5 81.0 92.2 100
276. Responsible 30.0 67.6 92.3 82.5 90.6 100
277. Restless 13.3 29.4 76.9 82.8 84.4 95.2
278. Sad 100 100 100 98.4 100 100
279. Safe 80.0 82.4 100 95.3 98.4 100
280. Satisfied 16.7 32.4 80.8 82.3 84.1 100
281. Scared 93.3 100 100 93.8 95.2 100
282. Secure 13.3 41.2 80.8 76.6 77.8 100
283. Sensitive 13.3 38.2 80.8 85.9 82.5 100
284. Serious 56.7 67.6 96.2 85.7 93.4 100
285. Settled 23.3 67.6 84.6 79.4 87.3 100
286. Shaken 20.0 38.2 76.9 79.4 90.5 95.2
287. Shocked 40.0 76.5 88.5 90.6 92.1 100
288. Shy 80.0 94.1 96.2 93.8 95.2 100
289. Sickened 3.3 11.8 53.8 73.4 84.1 95.2
290. Sneaky 30.0 58.8 80.8 81.3 85.7 95.2
291. Sorry 100 100 100 82.8 84.1 90.5
292. Spiteful 36.7 58.8 69.2 79.7 81.0 85.7
293. Startled 6.7 29.4 53.8 73.4 73.0 95.2
294. Stupid 80.0 94.1 100 84.4 96.8 100
295. Sulky 40.0 76.5 80.8 81.3 85.5 90.5
296. Sure 60.0 70.6 92.3 90.6 93.5 100
297. Surprised 80.0 94.1 92.3 92.2 90.3 95.2
298. Tearful 83.3 82.4 92.3 82.8 90.3 95.2
299. Teasing 80.0 79.4 92.3 87.5 91.9 95.2
300. Tempted 6.7 35.3 80.8 78.1 91.9 95.2
301. Tender 6.7 20.6 73.1 67.2 79.0 90.5
302. Tense 6.7 14.7 61.5 71.9 85.5 95.2
303. Terrified 46.7 82.4 88.5 85.9 91.9 95.2
304. Terror 43.3 55.9 80.0 81.3 93.5 100
305. Thankful 60.0 85.3 92.3 92.2 95.2 95.2
306. Thinking 76.7 88.2 96.2 90.6 98.4 95.2
307. Thoughtful 43.3 61.8 88.5 87.5 96.7 95.2
308. Threatened 10.0 44.1 76.9 87.5 91.9 100
309. Threatening 13.3 41.2 84.6 85.9 91.9 95.2
310. Thrilled 6.7 61.8 80.8 84.4 90.3 95.2
311. Touched 40.0 67.6 88.5 78.1 88.5 100
312. Trapped 46.7 67.6 88.5 85.9 88.7 100
313. Troubled 30.0 50.0 80.8 81.3 90.3 100
314. Trusting 53.3 73.5 88.5 88.9 88.7 100
315. Uncaring 33.3 64.7 88.5 84.4 79.0 90.0
316. Uncertain 10.0 32.4 84.6 84.4 87.1 100
317. Uncomfortable 50.0 70.6 96.2 85.9 88.7 100
318. Understanding 40.0 70.6 100 87.1 93.5 100
319. Unfriendly 66.7 79.4 92.3 87.1 90.3 100
320. Unhappy 93.3 97.1 96.2 93.5 95.2 100
321. Unsure 36.7 67.6 96.2 89.8 90.3 95.0
322. Upset 83.3 97.1 100 96.6 96.8 100
323. Uptight 3.3 11.8 50.0 62.7 75.8 85.0
324. Useless 36.7 73.5 92.3 89.8 91.9 100
325. Vain 6.7 14.7 42.3 65.5 69.4 90.0
326. Wanted 50.0 64.7 84.6 82.8 93.5 100
327. Warm 66.7 64.7 92.3 90.0 96.8 100
328. Watchful 13.3 32.4 73.1 75.0 93.5 100
329. Weary 10.0 26.5 57.7 68.3 83.9 95.0
330. Weepy 30.0 47.1 76.9 78.3 87.1 95.0
331. Whining 46.7 70.6 84.6 81.0 79.0 90.0
332. Wishful 23.3 61.8 73.1 80.0 95.2 100
333. Wonder 43.3 55.9 88.5 88.3 95.2 100
334. Wondering 33.3 55.9 84.6 86.7 90.3 100
335. Worried 76.7 82.4 100 93.3 96.8 100
336. Worthless 10.0 23.5 65.4 78.3 95.2 100

These changes between age-bands are not only apparent by visual inspection (see Figure 1) but are confirmed by statistical analysis. A goodness of fit test conducted for the whole sample revealed a significant difference in the proportion of words recognized by at least 75% of participants in each age band (χ2[5] = 999.14, p < 0.0001). Next, five goodness of fit tests were conducted between each adjacent age-band. Using the Bonferroni correction for multiple testing, we chose a p value of <0.002 as a conservative level of significance, to control for the number of comparisons being conducted. The analysis revealed significant differences between 4–6 year olds and 7–8 year olds (χ2[1] = 21.19, p < 0.0001), between 7–8 year olds and 9–10 year olds (χ2[1] = 52.53, p < 0.0001), between 9–10 year olds and 11–12 year olds (χ2[1] = 102.94, p < 0.0001). However, between 11–12 year olds and 13–14 year olds, the difference in number of mental state terms understood by at least 75% of each age-band did not meet our level of significance (χ2[1] = 9.03, p < 0.005), and nor did the difference between 13–14 year olds and 15–16 year olds (χ2[1] = 4.7, p < 0.05). These results confirm that the size of emotional vocabulary increases significantly with age during childhood, but does not develop significantly after adolescence. This pattern is illustrated in Figure 1.

Figure 1.

Figure 1

The number of emotion and mental state words understood by at least 75% of participants in each age band.

In order to examine whether development of the emotion vocabulary varies for different emotion categories, the 336 words included in this survey were allocated to the 24 emotion categories, included in the Mind Reading DVD (Baron-Cohen et al., 20041). Table 2 shows the percentage of words in each emotion category that at least 75% of children understood in each age-band[OG3]. This shows the same developmental trend, of major change across the first 3 age-bands and a leveling off by early teens, especially for the more common (or basic) emotion groups (e.g., happy, sad, afraid, kind). On the other hand, the understanding of words from some emotion groups is more delayed (e.g., disbelieving, touched, romantic), and understanding of words from others (e.g., bored) is incomplete even in the highest age band. This may reflect an ongoing development of the emotional lexicon beyond adolescence years.

Table 2.

Percentage of words in each emotion category understood by at least 75% of each age band.

Category Age (years)
4–6 (%) 7–8 (%) 9–10 (%) 11–12 (%) 13–14 (%) 15–16 (%)
Kind (22) 22.7 31.8 59.1 81.8 95.5 95.5
Afraid (19) 21.1 42.1 63.2 100.0 100.0 100.0
Sneaky (5) 20.0 20.0 40.0 80.0 100.0 100.0
Sad (31) 19.4 25.8 45.2 83.9 100.0 100.0
Thinking (11) 18.2 36.4 63.6 81.8 90.9 100.0
Happy (39) 17.9 41.0 79.5 100.0 97.4 100.0
Bored (6) 16.7 16.7 33.3 83.3 83.3 83.3
Bothered (7) 14.3 14.3 71.4 85.7 100.0 100.0
Angry (23) 13.0 43.5 60.9 91.3 100.0 100.0
Fond (9) 11.1 22.2 77.8 100.0 100.0 100.0
Sorry (9) 11.1 22.2 55.6 100.0 100.0 100.0
Excited (9) 11.1 11.1 55.6 100.0 100.0 100.0
Unsure (201) 9.5 14.3 61.9 81.0 90.5 95.2
Hurt (22) 9.1 27.3 50.0 86.4 95.5 100.0
Surprised (11) 9.1 27.3 45.5 90.9 90.9 100.0
Interested (13) 7.7 30.8 53.8 92.3 100.0 100.0
Unfriendly (302) 6.3 21.9 28.1 78.1 87.5 93.8
Liked (6) 0.0 33.3 50.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Wanting (8) 0.0 12.5 37.5 87.5 87.5 100.0
Sure (187) 0.0 5.6 38.9 83.3 88.9 94.4
Disbelieving (6) 0.0 0.0 50.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Romantic (2) 0.0 0.0 50.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Touched (4) 0.0 0.0 25.0 100.0 75.0 100.0
Disgusted (3) 0.0 0.0 0.0 66.7 100.0 100.0

Emotion categories taken from Mind Reading: The interactive guide to emotions. In brackets – the number of emotion words from each category that were included in the developmental survey.

Discussion

Comprehension of 336 emotion words was assessed using either self-report (from teenagers) or parent- or teacher-report (for younger children), ranging from 4 to 16 years old. The aim of the study was to collect normative data to document when different emotion terms are understood in development, and to measure differences in the proportion of each age group who understand each term. This was undertaken because of gaps in knowledge in how such competence grows with age. Results confirm that complex emotion vocabulary develops dramatically during childhood, doubling in size every 2 years between 4 and 11 years old, but that between 12 and 16 years old there was no significant increase in the number of emotion words understood. Apart from measuring differences between age-bands, this study also provides detailed data on each emotion-term so that these can be ordered according to level of difficulty, for future studies to exploit.

The finding that there is no significant development in this ability after adolescence may be an artifact of three factors. First, that we set a conservative probability level (p < 0.002) to control for multiple-testing, and the differences between the adolescent age groups, whilst meeting more relaxed criteria (p < 0.05), did not reach these levels. Secondly, we limited the word list to 336 words, and it may be that if a longer word list had been used, with more difficult words, changes between 12 and 16 years old would also have become evident. Lastly, since comprehension of the emotions was judged by different respondents in the younger vs. the older age bands, the lack of significant increase in emotion vocabulary comprehension amongst the adolescents could be related to their reluctance to admit they were not familiar with some emotion words. For these reasons, we do not wish to draw any conclusions about underlying mechanisms (brain development, hormonal changes, etc.) at the onset of adolescence having any special role in the rate of development of comprehension of the emotional lexicon.

One obvious limitation of this study is that the data was collected by self-report (in the case of 12–16 year olds) and parent/teacher report (in the case of children aged 4–11 year olds). There is thus no independent confirmation of comprehension, such as a performance test. This would not have been feasible in a large-scale study of this kind, but the reliability of self or parent/teacher report could be tested in future studies. We chose parent- or teacher-report for the pre-adolescent years because other instruments (such as the McArthur Checklist for Vocabulary Development) have used this method and shown that parent-report correlates well with actual performance measures of language comprehension (Fenson et al., 1994). For this reason, we suggest that the data reported here is likely to be reliable, but this should be tested formally using laboratory measures. Future studies could also look at effects of sex (with larger samples), word frequency, and emotion valence.

Secondly, this study only assessed the comprehension of emotion words. Ongoing studies are using this corpora to test the ability to recognize complex emotions and mental states from video-clips of faces and audio-clips of voices, to document how recognition of emotions from facial or vocal expressions develops with age (Golan et al., 2006; Golan and Baron-Cohen, submitted).

We conclude first that this study documents significant changes in rate of emotional lexicon comprehension between 4 and 11 years of age, which should be taken into consideration by researchers and educators when designing developmentally sensitive tests and teaching materials. Whereas at age 4–6 years old only 41 emotion words are understood by more than 75% of children, by 11 years old children understand 299 such words. Secondly, this study allows emotion terms to be ordered developmentally with respect to their level of difficulty.

Finally, the normative data reported here may be useful not only for studies of typical emotion comprehension but also against which to assess emotion-comprehension delays or deficits that may arise either for environmental reasons (e.g., following neglect or abuse; Pollak et al., 2000), or for neurodevelopmental reasons (e.g., as occurs in conditions such as autism and Asperger Syndrome). Although individuals on the autistic spectrum may not show deficits in basic emotion recognition (Loveland et al., 1997; Grossman et al., 2000), they do have deficits in recognizing complex emotions (Yirmiya et al., 1992; Baron-Cohen et al., 2001). The use of a graded developmental scale of emotion comprehension may help reveal such deficits in clinical populations, should they exist, and enable researchers to quantify the degree of developmental delay in emotion lexicon comprehension relative to typical age-matched controls.

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Acknowledgments

The authors were supported by the Medical Research Council, the Shirley Foundation, the Corob Charitable Trust, and the National Alliance for Autism Research (now called Autism Speaks) during the preparation of this work. We are grateful to our colleagues at Red Green and Blue Ltd, and Cambridge Learning.

Footnotes

1Because of such exclusion criteria, the corpora of emotion terms investigated in the present study represent a subset of those found in the Mindreading DVD (www.jkp.com/mindreading), which aims to be a comprehensive encyclopedia of emotions.

References

  1. Baron-Cohen S., Wheelwright S., Spong A., Scahill V. L., Lawson J. (2001). Are intuitive physics and intuitive psychology independent? A test with children with Asperger Syndrome. J. Dev. Learn. Disord. 5, 47–78 [Google Scholar]
  2. Bretherton I., Beeghly M. (1982). Talking about internal states: The acquisition of an explicit theory of mind. Dev. Psychol. 18, 906–921 10.1037/0012-1649.18.6.906 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  3. Baron-Cohen S., Hill J., Golan O., Wheelwright S. (2003). Electronic emotions: encyclopaedic. Autism Dig. 5, 14–19 [Google Scholar]
  4. Denham S.A. (1998). Emotional Development in Young Children. New York, London: Guilford Press [Google Scholar]
  5. Ekman P., Friesen W. (1969). The repertoire of non-verbal behavior: categories, origins, usage, and coding. Semiotica 1, 49–98 [Google Scholar]
  6. Fenson L., Dale P. S., Reznick J. S., Bates E., Thal D. J., Pethick S. J. (1994). Variability in early communicative development. Monogr. Soc. Res. Child Dev. 59, 32–60 10.2307/1166093 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  7. Golan O., Baron-Cohen S., Hill J. J. (2006). The Cambridge Mindreading (CAM) Face-Voice Battery: testing complex emotion recognition in adults with and without Asperger Syndrome. J. Autism Dev. Disord. 36, 169–183 10.1007/s10803-005-0057-y [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  8. Grossman J. B., Klin A., Carter A. S., Volkmar F. R. (2000). Verbal bias in recognition of facial emotions in children with Asperger syndrome. J. Child Psychol. Psychiatry 41, 369–379 10.1111/1469-7610.00621 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  9. Harris P. L. (1989). Children and Emotion: The Development of Psychological Understanding. Oxford: Blackwell [Google Scholar]
  10. Herba C., Phillips M. (2004). Annotation: development of facial expression recognition from childhood to adolescence: behavioural and neurological perspectives. J. Child Psychol. Psychiatry 45, 1185–1198 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2004.00316.x [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  11. Izard C. E., Harris P. L. (1995). “Emotional development and developmental psychopathology,” in Developmental Psychopathology, Vol. 1, Theory and Methods, eds Cohen D. J., Cicchetti D. V. (Oxford: John Wiley &Sons; ), 467–503 [Google Scholar]
  12. Johnson-Laird P. N., Oatley K. (1989). The language of emotions: an analysis of a semantic field. Cogn. Emot. 3, 81–123 10.1080/02699938908408075 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  13. Loveland K. A., Tunali Kotoski B., Chen Y. R., Ortegon J., Pearson D. A., Brelsford K. A., Gibes M. C. (1997). Emotion recognition in autism: verbal and non-verbal information. Dev. Psychopathol. 9, 579–593 10.1017/S0954579497001351 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  14. Ortony A., Clore G., Foss M. (1987). The referential structure of the affective lexicon. Cogn. Sci. 11, 341–364 10.1207/s15516709cog1103_4 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  15. Pollak S. D., Cicchetti D., Hornung K., Reed A. (2000). Recognizing emotion in faces: developmental effects of child abuse and neglect. Dev. Psychol. 36, 679–688 10.1037/0012-1649.36.5.679 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  16. Prinz J. (2004). “Which emotions are basic?” in Emotion, Evolution, and Rationality, Vol. 69–88, eds Evans D., Cruse P.(Oxford: Oxford University Press; ), 69–88 [Google Scholar]
  17. Reilly J. S., McIntire M., Bellugi U. (1990). “Faces: the relationship of language and affect,” in From Gesture to Language in Hearing and Deaf Children, eds Volterra V., Erting C. J.(New York, NY: Springer-Verlag Publishing; ), >335 [Google Scholar]
  18. Ridgeway D., Waters E., Kuczaj S. A. (1985). Acquisition of emotion descriptive language: receptive and productive vocabulary norms for ages 18 months to 6 years. Dev. Psychol. 21, 901–908 10.1037/0012-1649.21.5.901 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  19. Storm C., Storm T. (1987). A taxonomic study of the vocabulary of emotions. J. Pers. Soc. Psychol. 53, 805–816 10.1037/0022-3514.53.4.805 [DOI] [Google Scholar]
  20. Yirmiya N., Sigman M. D., Kasari C., Mundy P. (1992). Empathy and cognition in high-functioning children with autism. Child Dev. 63, 150–160 10.2307/1130909 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

Articles from Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience are provided here courtesy of Frontiers Media SA

RESOURCES