“…This is consistent with results that approach‐oriented preschoolers, who are characterized by preference for challenging tasks and demonstrating higher optimism, exhibit higher attention skills in orienting, vigilance, and executive tasks, than avoidance‐oriented children, who are characterized by avoiding challenges and exhibiting negativity (Chang & Burns, 2005). In addition, evidence that anger, an adaptive reaction elicited by arm restraint, is the by‐product of both interest in and focus on desired goals (Lewis & Ramsay, 2005) or rewarding information (Ford et al., 2010), and persistence in mastery situations (He et al., in press; Kearney, 2004), supports the current relations between anger and attention focusing. Moreover, other work has found that positive affect is associated with longer attention focusing in a learning task (Rose, Futterwelt, & Jankowski, 1999).…”