“…With development, there is an increase in the range of both experienced emotions – from primary emotions, such as joy, sadness, fear, and anger, to secondary emotions, such as pride, shame, and guilt at two/three years – and situations eliciting them (Harris, ; Lewis, ; Sroufe, ). From preschool years children become more competent in causal reasoning and emotional event memory, for example preferring to narrate psychological rather than physical events, and characterizing positive narratives with more objects, people, and descriptive details, and negative narratives with more mental states, in terms of thoughts and emotions; moreover, they develop regulation abilities to control emotional experiences, both in behavioral and cognitive forms (Fivush, Hazzard, McDermott Sales, Sarfati & Brown, ; Gobbo & Raccanello, , ; Sroufe, ; Wellman & Gelman, ). As age increases, all these abilities become more complex, with elementary school children also managing mixed or contrasting emotions pertaining to the same event (Larsen, To & Fireman, ).…”